Phytoremediation of Endosulfan Sulfate-Contaminated Soil by Single and Mixed Plant Cultivations

被引:0
|
作者
Khanitta Somtrakoon
Maleeya Kruatrachue
Hung Lee
机构
[1] Mahasarakham University,Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
[2] Mahidol University,Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
[3] University of Guelph,School of Environmental Sciences
来源
关键词
Cowpea; Cucumber; Endosulfan sulfate; Mixed plant cultivation; Phytoremediation; Sweet corn;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The extent of endosulfan sulfate removal from soils by different planting pattern with sweet corn (Zea mays), cowpea (Vigna sinensis), and cucumber (Cucumis sativus) either cultivated alone or together was investigated in pot experiments. Endosulfan sulfate was removed to the greatest extent in the treatment in which sweet corn was grown alone; only 11.3 and 27.2 % of the initial endosulfan sulfate remained in rhizospheric and bulk soil, respectively, of sweet corn grown alone at day 60. Endosulfan sulfate was also removed from soil to a great extent in treatments where cucumber or cowpea was grown alone; only 30.3 and 38.8 % of endosulfan sulfate remained in their respective rhizospheric soil after 45 days. However, cucumber did not tolerate the toxicity of endosulfan sulfate well and died around 50–55 days when it was cultivated either alone or together with another plant. Cultivation of sweet corn and cowpea together was less effective in removing endosulfan sulfate from soil; about 41.7 and 52.3 % of endosulfan sulfate remained in their respective rhizospheric soils after 60 days. The results showed that single cultivation of the plants was the most efficient way to remediate endosulfan sulfate-contaminated soil in this study. Endosulfan sulfate was detected in both the root and shoot of plants but given the low levels found, bioaccumulation was judged to be a relatively minor factor in endosulfan sulfate removal from soil.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Influence of Nitrogen Addition and Plant Root Parameters on Phytoremediation of Pyrene-contaminated Soil
    Oriana A. Thompson
    Duane C. Wolf
    John D. Mattice
    Gregory J. Thoma
    Water, Air, and Soil Pollution, 2008, 189 : 37 - 47
  • [42] Potential use of Solanum lycopersicum and plant growth promoting rhizobacterial (PGPR) strains for the phytoremediation of endosulfan stressed soil
    Rani, Rupa
    Kumar, Vipin
    Gupta, Pratishtha
    Chandra, Avantika
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2021, 279
  • [43] Isolation of endosulfan sulfate-degrading Rhodococcus koreensis strain S1-1 from endosulfan contaminated soil and identification of a novel metabolite, endosulfan diol monosulfate
    Ito, Koji
    Kawashima, Fujimasa
    Takagi, Kazuhiro
    Kataoka, Ryota
    Kotake, Masaaki
    Kiyota, Hiromasa
    Yamazaki, Kenichi
    Sakakibara, Futa
    Okada, Sanae
    BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2016, 473 (04) : 1094 - 1099
  • [44] COMPARING ANTHRACENE AND FLUORENE DEGRADATION IN ANTHRACENE AND FLUORENE-CONTAMINATED SOIL BY SINGLE AND MIXED PLANT CULTIVATION
    Somtrakoon, Khanitta
    Chouychai, Waraporn
    Lee, Hung
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHYTOREMEDIATION, 2014, 16 (04) : 415 - 428
  • [45] Phytoremediation of Copper and Zinc Contaminated Soil around Textile Industries using Bryophyllum pinnatum Plant
    Riza, Mumtahina
    Hoque, Sirajul
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2021, 22 (04): : 88 - 97
  • [46] Phytoremediation of soil co-contaminated with heavy metals and TNT using four plant species
    Lee, Insook
    Baek, Kyunghwa
    Kim, Hyunhee
    Kim, Sunghyun
    Kim, Jaisoo
    Kwon, Youngseok
    Chang, Yoonyoung
    Bae, Bumhan
    Journal of Environmental Science and Health - Part A Toxic/Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering, 2007, 42 (13): : 2039 - 2045
  • [47] Phytoremediation of crude oil contaminated soil using Sudanese plant species Acacia sieberiana Tausch
    Abdallah, Amel Hassan
    Elhussein, Adil Ali
    Ibrahim, Dafaalla Ali
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHYTOREMEDIATION, 2023, 25 (03) : 314 - 321
  • [48] Effects of plant growth-promoting bacteria on the phytoremediation of cadmium-contaminated soil by sunflower
    Mohammadzadeh, Arash
    Tavakoli, Mojtaba
    Motesharezadeh, Babak
    Chaichi, Mohammad Reza
    ARCHIVES OF AGRONOMY AND SOIL SCIENCE, 2017, 63 (06) : 807 - 816
  • [49] Effect of Exogenous Plant Debris and Microbial Agents on Phytoremediation of Copper-Contaminated Soil in Shanghai
    Zhang, Qian
    Fang, Hailan
    Shang, Kankan
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2022, 11 (22):
  • [50] Comparative evaluation of phytoremediation of metal contaminated soil of firing range by four different plant species
    Tariq, Saadia R.
    Ashraf, Azka
    ARABIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2016, 9 (06) : 806 - 814