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1.
Hot water and hot air treatments were evaluated for disinfesting anthurium, Anthurium andraeanum Lind., stem cuttings of the bacterial blight pathogen, Xanthomonas axonopodis pathovar dieffenbachiae (Xa pv. dieffenbachiae), and burrowing nematodes, Radopholus similis, and their effect on viability of the cuttings. Xa pv. dieffenbachiae suspended in distilled water in 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tubes, lost at least 6 logs of viability when exposed to hot water at 50 °C for 12 min or hot air at 50 °C, 60% RH for 35 min administered in commercial-sized heat treatment facilities. Stem cuttings exposed to hot air at 50 °C, 60% RH were disinfested of R. similis when their core temperatures attained 50 °C. Plant response to heat treatments varied among cultivars; however, all evaluated cultivars exhibited high tolerance to hot water at 50 °C for up to 24 min with equal or enhanced sprouting rates as compared to untreated checks. Sprouting rates of three of the four cultivars treated with hot air at 50 °C, 60% RH for up to 125 min were equal to or higher than untreated checks, while cuttings from the less tolerant cultivar ‘Tropic Fire’ registered lower sprouting rates for all hot air treatment durations as compared to untreated checks, Flower quality parameters, including average spathe size, stem diameter and number of flowers harvested from plants heat-treated as cuttings, were comparable to or higher than untreated checks for all treatments and cultivars. Disinfestation of anthurium stem cuttings for bacterial blight and the burrowing nematode can be achieved in hot water at 50 °C for 24 min without loss of sprouting rate or flower quality.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of temperature on anatomical and chemical characteristics of Quercus cerris cork were examined. Cork samples were subjected to isothermal air heating between 150 °C and 400 °C and analyzed for mass loss, cellular structure and chemical composition.The thermal decomposition of Q. cerris cork is similar to that of Q. suber cork. Cork is thermally stable below 200 °C and after that degradation depended on temperature and heating time with increasing mass loss, i.e. 3% at 200 °C 10 min and 46% at 350 °C 60 min. With temperature and starting at 200 °C, cells expanded, cell wall thickness was reduced and corrugations were lost.Extractives degraded at lower temperatures, although aliphatic extractives were found to be more stable. Suberin from Q. cerris was more heat resistant than Q. suber suberin, while lignin showed similar resistance.These results provide a basis for studies on the production of Q. cerris bark expanded cork agglomerates for insulation purposes.  相似文献   

3.
Castilleja tenuiflora is a highly valued medicinal plant that grows in pine-oak woods in Mexico. In this study, we identified for the first time verbascoside and isoverbascoside as the major phenylethanoid glycosides (PhGs) in C. tenuiflora. These compounds have proven biological activities, including anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and cytotoxic activities, which may be related to the traditional uses of this plant. We developed a reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) procedure to analyze PhGs, and determined their concentrations in various different tissues of wild plants. Verbascoside accumulated mainly in roots and inflorescences (9.23 and 7.88 mg g−1 dry biomass, respectively), while isoverbascoside accumulated mainly in the roots (7.13 mg g−1 dry biomass). To provide an alternative source of material for production of bioactive compounds, we established in vitro adventitious root cultures in which roots were grown in B5 medium containing either 10 μM indole 3-acetic acid (IAA) or 10 μM α-naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA). The greatest dry biomass yield (30 g L−1) was achieved at 30 days after transfer of roots into IAA-containing medium. The highest specific yields of PhGs were also obtained using this auxin; the maximum level of verbascoside was 14.62 mg g−1 dry root biomass (438.6 mg L−1) at 30 days after root transfer, and the maximum yield of isoverbascoside was 37.32 mg g−1 dry root biomass (522.48 mg L−1) at 23 days after root transfer. Adventitious root cultures of C. tenuiflora are a promising system for further studies on scale-up and phenylethanoid glycosides biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The steam pre-treatment with low severity preserves valuable biomass components, and further delignification with alkaline peroxide could improve hydrolysis. A combination of low severity steam pretreatment and alkaline peroxide post-treatment of Lespedeza stalks was investigated. The post-treatment of steam-pretreated Lespedeza stalks with alkaline peroxide significantly increased the cellulose content and changed the structure of the cellulose-rich fractions. A glucose yield of 503.5 mg g−1 raw material from enzyme hydrolysis was obtained when the steam-pretreated material (184 °C for 4 min) was post-treated with 2% hydrogen peroxide at 60 °C for 24 h with a substrate concentration of 3.3%. Its hydrolysis yield is 88.8%, which is higher than that of samples processed by steam pretreatment alone (63.7%). The samples obtained by post-treatment with alkaline peroxide were found to have a smoother surface and looser structure in scanning electron microscopy images. The isolated lignin preparations had a yield range from 10.9 to 14.7 (% dry matter). The lignin was characterized by thermogravimetric analysis/differential thermal analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and gel permeation chromatography. Alkaline peroxide treatment increased the thermal stability of lignin, and decreased the amounts of all functional groups. Depolymerization and repolymerization occurred during the alkaline peroxide treatment.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, Nigella sativa L. oil was extracted using supercritical carbon dioxide with full factorial design to determine the best extraction condition (pressure, temperature and dynamic extraction time) for obtaining an extract with high yield, antioxidant activity and thymoquinone (TQ) quantity. The maximum thymoquinone content in the highest overall yield was achieved through SC-CO2 extraction condition of 150 bar, 40 °C, 120 min with the value of 4.09 mg/ml. The highest SC-CO2 extraction yield was 23.20% which obtained through extraction condition of 350 bar, 60 °C and 120 min. The extraction conducted at 350 bar, 50 °C, 60 min showed the lowest IC50 value (highest antioxidant activity) of 2.59 mg/ml using DPPH radical scavenging activity method. Fatty acid composition of the extracted oil with highest radical scavenging activity was obtained by gas chromatographic analysis.  相似文献   

6.
Supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) was employed to extract oil from hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) seeds. For ground seeds, the supercritical extraction was carried out at temperatures of 40, 60 and 80 °C and pressures of 300 and 400 bar. Different solvent-ratios were applied. Supercritical CO2 extractions were compared with a conventional technique, n-hexane in Soxhlet. The extraction yields, fatty acid composition of the oil and oxidation stability were determined. The seed samples used in this work contained 81% PUFAs, of which 59.6% was linoleic acid (ω-6), 3.4% γ-linolenic (ω-3), and 18% α-linolenic (ω-6). The highest oil yield from seeds was 22%, corresponding to 72% recovery, at 300 bar and 40 °C and at 400 bar and 80 °C. The highest oxidation stability corresponding to 2.16 mM Eq Vit E was obtained at 300 bar and 80 °C.  相似文献   

7.
Mature red fruits of Opuntia ficus-indica contain two soluble pigment, betanin and indicaxanthin. The optimal conditions for dye extraction were to mix 50 g of juice from cactus pears with 100 mL of acidified water as solvent for dye extraction. Two main dyes were purified from the pigment extract by chromatography and identified by UV-vis, HPLC and LC-MS techniques as indicaxanthin (15 mg per 100 g) and betanin (280 mg per 100 g). The effect of dye bath pH, salt concentration, dyeing time and temperature was studied. The optimal conditions for dyeing modified acrylic fabrics with betanin dye were carried out at 50 °C for 45 min at pH 5. Un-mordanted samples have good properties of water and washing fastness. Mordant CoSO4 was found to give good light fastness (rating 5).  相似文献   

8.
We assessed the influences of ambient temperature, rainfall, shade cover and elevation on seasonal abundance of coffee leafminer Leucoptera coffeella (Guérin-Ménèville) and its natural enemies in coffee farms in the Soconusco region of Chiapas, Mexico. Mined coffee leaves were most abundant during the rainy season (i.e. historical average rainfall >200 mm/mo, April–November) compared to the dry season (<100 mm/mo, December–March), and at low (<600 m asl) relative to high (>900 m asl) elevations. The abundance of mined leaves increased with rainfall, and decreased with maximum daily temperatures. Coffee leafminer survivorship was highest during the dry season (>40%), when predation was lowest (<10%). Predation was the main source of coffee leafminer mortality, and was greatest during the rainy season (>25%) when coffee leafminer incidence was highest (>30% mined leaves per plant). None of the weather variables that were evaluated (viz. maximum and minimum temperatures, and rainfall) significantly impacted parasitism ratios. Shade cover moderated on-farm temperatures, by reducing maximum daily temperatures and any potential, direct impacts of rainfall on coffee leafminer, by providing partial shelter from rainfall, but did not significantly affect coffee leafminer incidence. In 48 h laboratory trials, coffee leafminer oviposition was highest at 28 °C (∼15 eggs/female), minimal at 25 °C (∼3 eggs) and nil at 20 °C, and higher during night-time hours (>8 eggs/female/day) compared to day-time hours (<1 egg). Historical average temperatures were higher at low elevation (yearly average ca. 25 °C; range = 18.0–32.0 °C) than at high elevation (ca. 21 °C; 13.5–28.5 °C), and we predicted that physical environmental conditions (i.e. night-time hours with temperatures > 20 °C) were permissive of coffee leafminer oviposition during twice as many hours each year at low elevation (4060 h) compared to high elevation (2081 h). Overall, our results suggested that evident differences in the abundance of coffee leafminer between elevations may be due in considerable part to differences in ambient temperatures, particularly night-time temperatures, rather than rainfall, shade cover, or elevation per se.  相似文献   

9.
Secondary plant compounds are recognised as important components of plant defence system against herbivores and pathogens. Five monoterpenoids, (R)-linalool, 1,8-cineole, (S)-2-heptyl acetate, (S)-2-heptanol and citral, which are natural components of the essential oils of Aframomum melegueta (K. Schum) and Zingiber officinale (Roscoe), were tested at the ratios in which they occur naturally for repellent activity against Tribolium castaneum (Herbst.) and Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) in a 4-way olfactometer. The results showed the repellent properties of the compounds as both beetles spent less time in the olfactometer arm containing the test stimuli. (R)-linalool and (S)-2-heptanol were stronger repellent compounds than the others. Linalool showed good repellent activity against T. castaneum (P = 0.001) as the insect spent 1.22 min in the test arm compared to the control arms (2.78 min), and R. dominica (P = 0.001) with 0.89 min in the test arm compared to 2.87 min in the control arms. With (S)-2-heptanol, T. castaneum spent 1.23 min in the test arm compared to 2.83 min in the control arms. R. dominica spent 1.61 min in the test arm and 2.69 min in the control arms. For the number of entries or visits made, while both insects were significantly repelled (P < 0.05) by the linalool-treated arm than the control, only R. dominica was repelled by the (S)-2-heptanol-treated arm (P = 0.038) compared to the control arms. The results indicate that A. melegueta and Z. officinale essential oils and their components could be suitable as safer repellents or fumigants against T. castaneum and R. dominica.  相似文献   

10.
The present study evaluated the herbicidal potential of extracts from chicory (Cichorium intybus L.) roots on the germination of Echinochloa crusgalli L. Beauv and Amaranthus retroflexus L. Eight ultrasonic assisted-extraction (UAE) conditions were optimized, using an orthogonal matrix design. The extract concentrations that would yield the largest allelopathic effects on the plant species were estimated by a modeling analysis. Our results showed that an alcohol solvent extract of chicory root had significant herbicidal activity which depended on the extract concentrations and the target species. The half-inhibitory concentrations of crude extract of chicory root ranged from 0.5 g l−1 to 40.5 g l−1. At a frequency of 40 kHz, the optimum UAE conditions to produce an extract for use as herbicide against E. crusgalli L. included an ethanol content (Ec) of 50% (v/v), a solvent-to-solid ratio (SR) of 16:1, an ultrasound temperature (UT) of 35 °C, an impregnation time (Imt) of 24 h with two rounds of impregnation (Imr), a sonication period (St) of 120 min with two rounds of sonication (Sr) and an ultrasound input power (P) of 200 W. The optimum conditions to produce an extract for use against A. retroflexus L. included an Ec of 100% (v/v), a SR of 16:1, an UT of 20 °C, an Imt of 48 h with two Imr, a St of 30 min with one Sr and a P of 400 W. The extract had the largest inhibitory effects on the germination index and root growth of both E. crusgalli L. and A. retroflexus L. at concentrations ranging from 30.8 to 33.7 g l−1. At a concentration of 4.2 g l−1, the extract significantly enhanced the shoot growth of A. retroflexus L. Overall, chicory root extract has potential for use as a main ingredient in natural herbicides or for development as a novel plant-derived herbicide.  相似文献   

11.
Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal. (Indian ginseng) is an important medicinal plant which yields pharmaceutically active compounds called withanolides. The present work deals with optimization of parameters of hairy root culture of W. somnifera for the production of biomass and withanolide A. We also investigated the effects of carbon source [sucrose, glucose, fructose, maltose, glucose + fructose (1:1), fructose + sucrose (1:1) and sucrose + glucose (1:1)], sucrose concentration (1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 6% and 8%) and the initial medium pH (4.0, 4.5, 5.0, 5.5, 5.8, 6.0 and 6.5) on growth and production of withanolide A in hairy root cultures of W. somnifera. We found that biomass accumulation and production of withanolide A was highest when sucrose was used as the carbon source (11.92 g l−1 DW and 11.96 mg g−1 DW of withanolide A). Further 3% sucrose concentration was found to be optimal for biomass accumulation (11.92 g l−1 DW) and 4% sucrose favoured the production of withanolide A (13.28 mg g−1 DW) in the tested range of concentrations (1-8%). The biomass of hairy roots was optimal when the initial medium pH was 5.8 (12.1 g l−1 DW) and the withanolide A production was highest in the medium pH set at 6.0 (13.84 mg g−1 DW).  相似文献   

12.
The chestnut bur, a forest waste product from chestnut processing in the food industry, was studied as a potential source of natural antioxidants. Extractions were performed using aqueous solutions of methanol or ethanol. Experiments were planned according to an incomplete 33 factorial design to study the influence of temperature (25-75 °C), time (30-120 min) and solvent concentration (50-90%) on extraction yield and on extract properties: total phenols content, antioxidant activity (using the FRAP, DPPH and ABTS methods) and average molecular weights. All dependent variables were influenced by temperature and solvent concentration whereas the influence of time was almost negligible. Using the response surface methodology the optimal extraction conditions were selected: the highest temperature assayed (75 °C), the lowest solvent concentration (50%) and an extraction time of 75 min for the methanolic extractions and of 30 min for the ethanolic ones. Under those conditions the values predicted for extraction yield and total phenols content were 18.95% and 36.32 g GAE/100 g extract for the methanolic extract and 17.95% and 26.11 g GAE/100 g extract for the ethanolic ones. Methanolic extracts showed superior total phenols content and antioxidant properties and slightly higher extraction yields than ethanolic extracts; however, ethanol is recommended for food applications due to its GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) qualification. Gallic acid esters of glucose, ellagic acid and small proportions of quercetin-3-β-d-glucoside, phenolic compounds with demonstrated antioxidant properties, were identified in chestnut bur extracts by RP-HPLC-ESI-TOF.  相似文献   

13.
In the present study, milled cotton stalks were subjected to alkali pretreatment with NaOH at 1-4% (w/v) concentrations at 121 °C for time ranging from 30 to 90 min. Ozone pretreatment was performed by passing 45 mg/L of ozone gas over 2 mm cotton stalks for 150 min at a flow rate of 0.37 L/min. The residual biomass from 4% alkali pretreatment for 60 min showed 46.6% lignin degradation accompanied by 83.2% increase in glucan content, compared with the untreated biomass. Hydrolysis of 4% alkali-treated and ozone-treated cotton stalks was conducted using enzyme combination of 20 filter paper cellulase units/gram dried substrate (FPU/g-ds), 45 IU/g-ds β-glucosidase and 15 IU/g-ds pectinase. Enzymatic hydrolysis of alkali-treated and ozone-treated biomass after 48 h resulted in 42.29 g/L glucose, 6.82 g/L xylose and 24.13 g/L glucose, 8.3 g/L xylose, respectively. About 99% of glucose was consumed in 24 h by Pichia kudriavzevii HOP-1 cells resulting in 19.82 g/L of ethanol from alkali-treated cotton stalks and 10.96 g/L of ethanol from ozone-treated cotton stalks. Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of the alkali-treated cotton stalks after 12-h pre-hydrolysis resulted in ethanol concentration, ethanol yield on dry biomass basis and ethanol productivity of 19.48 g/L, 0.21 g/g and 0.41 g/L/h, respectively which holds promise for further scale-up studies. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study employing SSF for ethanol production from cotton stalks.  相似文献   

14.
Growing cotton during the tropical dry season avoids many insect pests endemic in the wet season. The impact of low mid-season radiation and night temperature that characterise the dry season, on the conversion of radiation to biomass (RUE) and the partitioning of this biomass were measured as these were largely unknown. Over three seasons, two Gossypium hirsutum (upland) cultivars and a Gossypium barbadense cultivar were sown from March to June at the Ord River (15.5°S), Western Australia. For the highest yielding March and April sowings, final biomass was similar to high yielding temperate grown cotton (∼30° latitude) and was generally greater than May or June sowings. However, biomass was accumulated differently: maximum growth rate was 6–12 g/m2/day for 78–134 days compared with 15–25 g/m2/day for 25–60 days reported for temperate grown cotton. RUE changed significantly with ontogeny, peaking between squaring and early flowering. The range in RUE of 1.2–2.0 g/MJ throughout the crop lifecycle for the upland cultivars was similar to temperate climates where biomass was corrected to a glucose equivalent. The RUE of 1.2–2.3 g/MJ measured over the lifecycle of G. barbadense cultivar was the first reported for this species. From first square to first flower the variation in RUE could be explained by a linear decline (p < 0.05) with temperature, which may limit vegetative biomass in May and June sowings and in cooler than average seasons for March and April sowings. Due to favourable temperatures and water supply, sowing in March would have the greatest risk of rank growth. It was concluded the low temperature and radiation during flowering and boll growth combined to reduce crop growth rate but high yields were achieved when the crop boll filling phase was extended. Management must be tailored to ensure a high proportion of boll growth (60–80%) can occur after vegetative growth has terminated.  相似文献   

15.
A bright yellow color of pasta is an important qualitative trait for the durum wheat industry. Final color is the result of the balance between yellow and brown components in semolina. Polyphenoloxidase (PPO) is implicated as playing a significant role in darkening. This study aimed to characterize PPO activity of durum wheats. PPO was extracted and partially purified by ion-exchange chromatography on a column packed with diethyaminoethyl cellulose (DEAE). This procedure led to 26.33-fold purification with 24.7% recovery. The optimum temperature and pH of PPO were found to be 40 °C and 6.5, respectively. Heat stability of durum wheat PPO decreased as the temperatures increased from 30 to 80 °C. The z-value was calculated as 23.4 °C. It increased to 26.3 and 48.4 °C in the presence of 40% sucrose and 1 M NaCl, respectively. Durum wheat PPO was shown to use several phenolic compounds as substrate. Among the substrates used, the greatest substrate specificity was observed with catechol. Durum wheat PPO was sensitive to inhibitors such as ascorbic acid, cysteine, oxalic acid and citric acid. Ascorbic acid was the most effective inhibitor.  相似文献   

16.
Kalmegh (Andrographis paniculata Wall. ex Nees) is a medicinal herb of tropical south east Asia and native to India and Sri Lanka. It has been used herb for liver ailment in all prevailing systems of medicine viz. Ayurvedic, Unani, Homeopathic and modern throughout most of the south East Asian countries viz. China, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Thailand, Burma, and Vietnam, etc. Commercially cultivation of Kalmegh is done through seeds. Optimal germination potential, temperature and first as well as final count day are three primary parameters for developing the seed quality standards. Germination of Kalmegh variety ‘CIM-Megha’ was carried out at six constant temperatures at an interval of every ‘5 °C’ from ‘15 to 40 °C’ temperatures coupled with 16 h light and 8 h dark photo period. The temperature of ‘25 °C’ was found optimally suitable with ‘94.6’ and ‘23.6’ percentage of germination and germination energy, respectively, while the temperature at ‘40 °C’ was deleterious with no germination. Significant decrease in percentage of germination and germination energy was observed at ‘15 °C’, ‘20 °C’, ‘30 °C’ and ‘35 °C’ of temperature in comparison to ‘25 °C’. The study further revealed that days 5-6 and days 7-9 after seed sowing were the ideal for first and final count, respectively for seed germination of Kalmegh.  相似文献   

17.
This work investigated the yield and nature of solvent-soluble organic compounds extracted from flax shive using a room temperature reaction (20 °C) with sodium ethoxide catalyst at four different concentrations (0.2, 0.5, 0.7, and 1.0 M) in anhydrous ethanol. Results were compared with the use of aqueous sodium hydroxide (1.0 M) at two different reaction temperatures (20 °C and 100 °C). Quantitative yield from flax shive varied linearly with sodium ethoxide concentration and averaged 54.5 mg/g on a dry-mass basis (db) at 1.0 M. In contrast, the quantitative yield using 1.0 M sodium hydroxide was much lower, averaging 2.2 mg/g (db). Yield did not differ significantly due to changes of particle size in either case, or due to changes of temperature over the range considered in the case of sodium hydroxide.Analyses using proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) confirmed all extracts to contain aromatic compounds, thus likely lignin derived, but found differences in chemical characteristics between the two extraction methods. One key difference was the presence of compounds with methyl ether groups in sodium hydroxide extracts that were absent in the case of sodium ethoxide extracts. Given that flax contains a mixed guaiacyl-syringyl lignin, methyl ether groups would be expected to be present. Control reactions on three model compounds were carried out to confirm that transesterification occurred with sodium ethoxide. These control reactions also demonstrated that methyl ether groups would be expected to remain intact under the extraction conditions reported here. In light of the higher yield of solvent soluble compounds recovered by extraction with basic ethanol, flax shive may represent a source of value-added phenolic constituents. This processing method may also represent a useful pre-treatment prior to the production of biofuels by cellulose degrading organisms.  相似文献   

18.
Rice starch suspensions of 10% dry matter (DM) were treated by heat (0.1 MPa at 20–85 °C) or pressure/heat combinations (100–600 MPa at 20, 40 and 50 °C) for 15 min to investigate their gelatinization and rheological characteristics. The maximum swelling index of about 12 g water per gram of DM was obtained by thermal treatment at 85 °C, meanwhile, that of 7.0 g was observed by 600-MPa pressurization at 50 °C. The higher temperatures or pressures resulted in the higher degrees of gelatinization. Furthermore, treatments of 0.1 MPa at 85 °C, 500 MPa at 50 °C and 600 MPa at various temperatures caused complete gelatinization of rice starch. The consistency index (K) and storage modulus (G′) dramatically increased from 70 °C or 400 MPa. The G′ values were higher in pressure-treated samples than those in thermal-treated samples. Therefore, an application of pressure/heat combinations as a processing method to improve the quality of rice starch products would be possible.  相似文献   

19.
This work evaluates the use of sugarcane bagasse (SCB) as a source of cellulose to obtain whiskers. These fibers were extracted after SCB underwent alkaline peroxide pre-treatment followed by acid hydrolysis at 45 °C. The influence of extraction time (30 and 75 min) on the properties of the nanofibers was investigated. Sugarcane bagasse whiskers (SCBW) were analyzed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD) and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) in air atmosphere. The results showed that SCB could be used as source to obtain cellulose whiskers and they had needle-like structures with an average length (L) of 255 ± 55 nm and diameter (D) of 4 ± 2 nm, giving an aspect ratio (L/D) around 64. More drastic hydrolysis conditions (75 min) resulted in less thermally stable whiskers and caused some damage on the crystal structure of the cellulose as observed by XRD analysis.  相似文献   

20.
Different vegetal biomass resources such as Picea abies bark, Castanea sativa chestnuts shell and Asclepias syriaca plant were considered to provide a source of natural bioactive compounds, which can be properly used in several directions such as: plant growth regulators and amendments in bioremediation. Having in mind a complex processing biomass technology, these raw materials are used in a first step to separate bioactive compounds by an aqueous extraction. The obtained extracts containing polyphenols were tested in germination tests to evaluate their influence on cadmium bioaccumulation in oat plant (Avena sativa). It was observed that the mentioned extracts modulated cadmium bioaccumulation, photosynthesizing pigments biosynthesis, plant growth and its development depending on metal ion concentration (5, 12.5, 25 mg/L), and extracts composition determined by vegetal raw material and their total polyphenols content (130, 122, 114 mg/L related to gallic acid). FTIR spectra and histo-anatomical cross section of the roots certify that P. abies bark and A. syriaca plant extracts amendments stimulated cadmium bioaccumulation, promoting the translocation of heavy metals to the aerial part of the plant, meanwhile chestnuts shell extract reduced the mobility of cadmium determining in situ inactivation of heavy metal ions.  相似文献   

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