Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy

Arsenic (As) is an ubiquitous metalloid that is introduced into the environment from both anthropogenic and geochemical sources. The As can be introduced in food chain through plants grown on polluted soil and/or contaminated irrigation water. The element may impair plant growth, moreover its toxici...

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Main Authors: Silvia Rita Stazi, Roberto Mancinelli, Enrica Allevato, Rosita Marabottini, Enio Campiglia, Sara Marinari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2016-08-01
Series:EQA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/6305
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spelling doaj-c0001aa261924fe689aa8a3b3e258eb02020-11-24T23:39:29ZengUniversity of BolognaEQA2039-98982281-44852016-08-01200273410.6092/issn.2281-4485/63055720Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central ItalySilvia Rita Stazi0Roberto Mancinelli1Enrica Allevato2Rosita Marabottini3Enio Campiglia4Sara Marinari5Department for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest systems, University of Tuscia, ViterboDepartment of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences, University of Tuscia, ViterboDepartment for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest systems, University of Tuscia, ViterboDepartment for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest systems, University of Tuscia, ViterboDepartment of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences, University of Tuscia, ViterboDepartment for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest systems, University of Tuscia, ViterboArsenic (As) is an ubiquitous metalloid that is introduced into the environment from both anthropogenic and geochemical sources. The As can be introduced in food chain through plants grown on polluted soil and/or contaminated irrigation water. The element may impair plant growth, moreover its toxicity and cancerogenicity poses a threat for human health. Most plants tolerate soil As concentrations up to 50 mg kg−1. However, at higher levels some plants might be negatively affected, while some others develop strategies to adapt to these conditions. It is known that As absorption, translocation and accumulation depend on plant species. The As tends to concentrate mainly in plant roots and old leaves, with a minor concentration in stems and young leaves, and the lowest concentrations is in fruits. In this study soil As mobility, tomato phytoavailability, and As plant partitioning were measured in an naturally As reach agricultural area (57.49 mg kg-1).  The results show that As compounds mainly accumulate in the roots (2.85 mg kg-1), whereas only a small portion is translocated to fruits (0.08 mg kg-1) making the risk for human health negligible.https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/6305Arsenictomato uptaketranslocationpartitioning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvia Rita Stazi
Roberto Mancinelli
Enrica Allevato
Rosita Marabottini
Enio Campiglia
Sara Marinari
spellingShingle Silvia Rita Stazi
Roberto Mancinelli
Enrica Allevato
Rosita Marabottini
Enio Campiglia
Sara Marinari
Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
EQA
Arsenic
tomato uptake
translocation
partitioning
author_facet Silvia Rita Stazi
Roberto Mancinelli
Enrica Allevato
Rosita Marabottini
Enio Campiglia
Sara Marinari
author_sort Silvia Rita Stazi
title Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
title_short Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
title_full Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
title_fullStr Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
title_full_unstemmed Phytoavailability of Geogenic Arsenic and Its Partitioning in Soil: a Case Of Study in a Thermal Area of Central Italy
title_sort phytoavailability of geogenic arsenic and its partitioning in soil: a case of study in a thermal area of central italy
publisher University of Bologna
series EQA
issn 2039-9898
2281-4485
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Arsenic (As) is an ubiquitous metalloid that is introduced into the environment from both anthropogenic and geochemical sources. The As can be introduced in food chain through plants grown on polluted soil and/or contaminated irrigation water. The element may impair plant growth, moreover its toxicity and cancerogenicity poses a threat for human health. Most plants tolerate soil As concentrations up to 50 mg kg−1. However, at higher levels some plants might be negatively affected, while some others develop strategies to adapt to these conditions. It is known that As absorption, translocation and accumulation depend on plant species. The As tends to concentrate mainly in plant roots and old leaves, with a minor concentration in stems and young leaves, and the lowest concentrations is in fruits. In this study soil As mobility, tomato phytoavailability, and As plant partitioning were measured in an naturally As reach agricultural area (57.49 mg kg-1).  The results show that As compounds mainly accumulate in the roots (2.85 mg kg-1), whereas only a small portion is translocated to fruits (0.08 mg kg-1) making the risk for human health negligible.
topic Arsenic
tomato uptake
translocation
partitioning
url https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/6305
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