Cargando…

Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Plant or nature-based cleanup or removal of pollutants is one of the most promising eco-friendly approaches for sustainable ecosystem management. Consequently, the contamination level, accumulation and remediation ability of three mangrove plants (Excoecaria agallocha, Avicennia offi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hossain, M. Belal, Masum, Zobaer, Rahman, M. Safiur, Yu, Jimmy, Noman, Md. Abu, Jolly, Yeasmin N., Begum, Bilkis A., Paray, Bilal Ahamad, Arai, Takaomi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9405028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009771
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11081144
_version_ 1784773779203817472
author Hossain, M. Belal
Masum, Zobaer
Rahman, M. Safiur
Yu, Jimmy
Noman, Md. Abu
Jolly, Yeasmin N.
Begum, Bilkis A.
Paray, Bilal Ahamad
Arai, Takaomi
author_facet Hossain, M. Belal
Masum, Zobaer
Rahman, M. Safiur
Yu, Jimmy
Noman, Md. Abu
Jolly, Yeasmin N.
Begum, Bilkis A.
Paray, Bilal Ahamad
Arai, Takaomi
author_sort Hossain, M. Belal
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Plant or nature-based cleanup or removal of pollutants is one of the most promising eco-friendly approaches for sustainable ecosystem management. Consequently, the contamination level, accumulation and remediation ability of three mangrove plants (Excoecaria agallocha, Avicennia officinalis, Sonneratia apetala) and their surrounding sediments were studied. Analyses of accumulated metals by using several indices reveals that the area is low to moderately contaminated, and all the three plants examined can be used as phytoextractors as they have the ability to store metals in their tissues. E. agallocha can be used as a good phytostabiliser for Mn which can reduce the risk of erosion and leaching of this pollutant to water bodies. Furthermore, for metal extraction, A. officinalis was found more suitable than other two plants. Overall, the results indicate that these mangrove plants can be used in the phytoremediation of contaminated soils by metals. ABSTRACT: Toxic metal pollution is a global issue, and the use of metal-accumulating plants to clean contaminated ecosystems is one of the most rapidly growing ecologically beneficial and cost-effective technologies. In this study, samples of sediment and three mangrove species (Excoecaria agallocha, Avicennia officinalis, Sonneratia apetala) were collected from the world’s largest mangrove forest (along the Northern Bay of Bengal Coast) with the aim of evaluating metal concentrations, contamination degrees, and phytoremediation potentiality of those plants. Overall, the heavy metals concentration in sediment ranged from Cu: 72.41–95.89 mg/kg; Zn: 51.28–71.20 mg/kg; Fe: 22,760–27,470 mg/kg; Mn: 80.37–116.37 mg/kg; Sr: 167.92–221.44 mg/kg. In mangrove plants, the mean concentrations were in the order of E. agallocha > A. officinalis > S. apetala. The mean (± SD) concentration of each metal in the plant tissue (root) was found following the descending order of Fe (737.37 ± 153.06) > Mn (151.13 ± 34.26) > Sr (20.98 ± 6.97) > Cu (16.12 ± 4.34) > Zn (11.3 ± 2.39) mg/kg, whereas, in the leaf part, the mean concentration (mg/kg) of each metal found in the order of Fe (598.75 ± 410.65) > Mn (297.27 ± 148.11) > Sr (21.40 ± 8.71) > Cu (14.25 ± 2.51) > Zn (12.56 ± 2.13). The contamination factor (CF) values for the studied metals were in the descending order of Cu > Sr > Zn > Fe > Mn. The values of I(geo) (Geo-accumulation index) and CF showed that the area was unpolluted to moderately polluted by Zn, Fe, Mn, Cu and Sr. Enrichment factor (EF) values in both sampling stations portrayed moderate to minimum enrichment. Phytoremediation potentiality of the species was assessed by bio-concentration factor (BCF) and translocation factor (TF). BCF values showed less accumulation for most of the heavy metals (<1) except Mn which was highly accumulated in all mangrove plants. The translocation factor (TF) values depicted that most of the heavy metals were strongly accumulated in plant tissues (>1). However, the BCF value depicts that Mn was highly bioconcentrated in E. agallocha, but the translocation on leaves tissue were minimum, which reveals that E. agallocha is phytoextractor for Mn, and accumulated in root tissues. All the examined plants can be used as phytoextractors as they have bioconcentration factors <1 and translocation factors >1. However, A. officinalis is clearly more suitable for metal extraction than S. apetala and E. agallocha in terms of hyper-metabolizing capabilities.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9405028
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94050282022-08-26 Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest Hossain, M. Belal Masum, Zobaer Rahman, M. Safiur Yu, Jimmy Noman, Md. Abu Jolly, Yeasmin N. Begum, Bilkis A. Paray, Bilal Ahamad Arai, Takaomi Biology (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Plant or nature-based cleanup or removal of pollutants is one of the most promising eco-friendly approaches for sustainable ecosystem management. Consequently, the contamination level, accumulation and remediation ability of three mangrove plants (Excoecaria agallocha, Avicennia officinalis, Sonneratia apetala) and their surrounding sediments were studied. Analyses of accumulated metals by using several indices reveals that the area is low to moderately contaminated, and all the three plants examined can be used as phytoextractors as they have the ability to store metals in their tissues. E. agallocha can be used as a good phytostabiliser for Mn which can reduce the risk of erosion and leaching of this pollutant to water bodies. Furthermore, for metal extraction, A. officinalis was found more suitable than other two plants. Overall, the results indicate that these mangrove plants can be used in the phytoremediation of contaminated soils by metals. ABSTRACT: Toxic metal pollution is a global issue, and the use of metal-accumulating plants to clean contaminated ecosystems is one of the most rapidly growing ecologically beneficial and cost-effective technologies. In this study, samples of sediment and three mangrove species (Excoecaria agallocha, Avicennia officinalis, Sonneratia apetala) were collected from the world’s largest mangrove forest (along the Northern Bay of Bengal Coast) with the aim of evaluating metal concentrations, contamination degrees, and phytoremediation potentiality of those plants. Overall, the heavy metals concentration in sediment ranged from Cu: 72.41–95.89 mg/kg; Zn: 51.28–71.20 mg/kg; Fe: 22,760–27,470 mg/kg; Mn: 80.37–116.37 mg/kg; Sr: 167.92–221.44 mg/kg. In mangrove plants, the mean concentrations were in the order of E. agallocha > A. officinalis > S. apetala. The mean (± SD) concentration of each metal in the plant tissue (root) was found following the descending order of Fe (737.37 ± 153.06) > Mn (151.13 ± 34.26) > Sr (20.98 ± 6.97) > Cu (16.12 ± 4.34) > Zn (11.3 ± 2.39) mg/kg, whereas, in the leaf part, the mean concentration (mg/kg) of each metal found in the order of Fe (598.75 ± 410.65) > Mn (297.27 ± 148.11) > Sr (21.40 ± 8.71) > Cu (14.25 ± 2.51) > Zn (12.56 ± 2.13). The contamination factor (CF) values for the studied metals were in the descending order of Cu > Sr > Zn > Fe > Mn. The values of I(geo) (Geo-accumulation index) and CF showed that the area was unpolluted to moderately polluted by Zn, Fe, Mn, Cu and Sr. Enrichment factor (EF) values in both sampling stations portrayed moderate to minimum enrichment. Phytoremediation potentiality of the species was assessed by bio-concentration factor (BCF) and translocation factor (TF). BCF values showed less accumulation for most of the heavy metals (<1) except Mn which was highly accumulated in all mangrove plants. The translocation factor (TF) values depicted that most of the heavy metals were strongly accumulated in plant tissues (>1). However, the BCF value depicts that Mn was highly bioconcentrated in E. agallocha, but the translocation on leaves tissue were minimum, which reveals that E. agallocha is phytoextractor for Mn, and accumulated in root tissues. All the examined plants can be used as phytoextractors as they have bioconcentration factors <1 and translocation factors >1. However, A. officinalis is clearly more suitable for metal extraction than S. apetala and E. agallocha in terms of hyper-metabolizing capabilities. MDPI 2022-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9405028/ /pubmed/36009771 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11081144 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hossain, M. Belal
Masum, Zobaer
Rahman, M. Safiur
Yu, Jimmy
Noman, Md. Abu
Jolly, Yeasmin N.
Begum, Bilkis A.
Paray, Bilal Ahamad
Arai, Takaomi
Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title_full Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title_fullStr Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title_short Heavy Metal Accumulation and Phytoremediation Potentiality of Some Selected Mangrove Species from the World’s Largest Mangrove Forest
title_sort heavy metal accumulation and phytoremediation potentiality of some selected mangrove species from the world’s largest mangrove forest
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9405028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009771
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11081144
work_keys_str_mv AT hossainmbelal heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT masumzobaer heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT rahmanmsafiur heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT yujimmy heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT nomanmdabu heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT jollyyeasminn heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT begumbilkisa heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT paraybilalahamad heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest
AT araitakaomi heavymetalaccumulationandphytoremediationpotentialityofsomeselectedmangrovespeciesfromtheworldslargestmangroveforest