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Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress

A biogeochemical study of more than 20,000 soil and plant samples from the North Caucasus, Dzungarian Alatau, Kazakh Uplands, and Karatau Mountains revealed features of the chemical element uptake by the local flora. Adaptation of ore prospecting techniques alongside environmental approaches allowed...

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Autores principales: Alekseenko, Vladimir A., Shvydkaya, Natalya V., Alekseenko, Alexey V., Machevariani, Maria M., Bech, Jaume, Pashkevich, Mariya A., Puzanov, Alexander V., Nastavkin, Aleksey V., Roca, Núria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7824280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33375579
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010033
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author Alekseenko, Vladimir A.
Shvydkaya, Natalya V.
Alekseenko, Alexey V.
Machevariani, Maria M.
Bech, Jaume
Pashkevich, Mariya A.
Puzanov, Alexander V.
Nastavkin, Aleksey V.
Roca, Núria
author_facet Alekseenko, Vladimir A.
Shvydkaya, Natalya V.
Alekseenko, Alexey V.
Machevariani, Maria M.
Bech, Jaume
Pashkevich, Mariya A.
Puzanov, Alexander V.
Nastavkin, Aleksey V.
Roca, Núria
author_sort Alekseenko, Vladimir A.
collection PubMed
description A biogeochemical study of more than 20,000 soil and plant samples from the North Caucasus, Dzungarian Alatau, Kazakh Uplands, and Karatau Mountains revealed features of the chemical element uptake by the local flora. Adaptation of ore prospecting techniques alongside environmental approaches allowed the detection of geochemical changes in ecosystems, and the lessons learned can be embraced for soil phytoremediation. The data on the influence of phytogeochemical stress on the accumulation of more than 20 chemical elements by plants are considered in geochemical provinces, secondary fields of deposits, halos surrounding ore and nonmetallic deposits, zones of regional faults and schist formation, and over lithological contact lines of chemically contrasting rocks overlain by 5–20 m thick soils and unconsolidated cover. We have corroborated the postulate that the element accumulation patterns of native plants under the natural geochemical stress depend not only on the element content in soils and the characteristics of a particular species but also on the values of ionic radii and valences; with an increase in the energy coefficients of a chemical element, its plant accumulation decreases sharply. The contribution of internal factors to element uptake from solutions gives the way to soil phytoremediation over vast contaminated areas. The use of hyperaccumulating species for mining site soil treatment depends on several external factors that can strengthen or weaken the stressful situation, viz., the amount of bedrock exposure and thickness of unconsolidated rocks over ores, the chemical composition of ores and primary halos in ore-containing strata, the landscape and geochemical features of sites, and chemical element migration patterns in the supergene zone.
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spelling pubmed-78242802021-01-24 Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress Alekseenko, Vladimir A. Shvydkaya, Natalya V. Alekseenko, Alexey V. Machevariani, Maria M. Bech, Jaume Pashkevich, Mariya A. Puzanov, Alexander V. Nastavkin, Aleksey V. Roca, Núria Plants (Basel) Article A biogeochemical study of more than 20,000 soil and plant samples from the North Caucasus, Dzungarian Alatau, Kazakh Uplands, and Karatau Mountains revealed features of the chemical element uptake by the local flora. Adaptation of ore prospecting techniques alongside environmental approaches allowed the detection of geochemical changes in ecosystems, and the lessons learned can be embraced for soil phytoremediation. The data on the influence of phytogeochemical stress on the accumulation of more than 20 chemical elements by plants are considered in geochemical provinces, secondary fields of deposits, halos surrounding ore and nonmetallic deposits, zones of regional faults and schist formation, and over lithological contact lines of chemically contrasting rocks overlain by 5–20 m thick soils and unconsolidated cover. We have corroborated the postulate that the element accumulation patterns of native plants under the natural geochemical stress depend not only on the element content in soils and the characteristics of a particular species but also on the values of ionic radii and valences; with an increase in the energy coefficients of a chemical element, its plant accumulation decreases sharply. The contribution of internal factors to element uptake from solutions gives the way to soil phytoremediation over vast contaminated areas. The use of hyperaccumulating species for mining site soil treatment depends on several external factors that can strengthen or weaken the stressful situation, viz., the amount of bedrock exposure and thickness of unconsolidated rocks over ores, the chemical composition of ores and primary halos in ore-containing strata, the landscape and geochemical features of sites, and chemical element migration patterns in the supergene zone. MDPI 2020-12-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7824280/ /pubmed/33375579 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010033 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Alekseenko, Vladimir A.
Shvydkaya, Natalya V.
Alekseenko, Alexey V.
Machevariani, Maria M.
Bech, Jaume
Pashkevich, Mariya A.
Puzanov, Alexander V.
Nastavkin, Aleksey V.
Roca, Núria
Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title_full Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title_fullStr Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title_full_unstemmed Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title_short Element Accumulation Patterns of Native Plant Species under the Natural Geochemical Stress
title_sort element accumulation patterns of native plant species under the natural geochemical stress
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7824280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33375579
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010033
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