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Forms of trace metals from inorganic sources in soils and amounts found in spring barley
Authors:Anna Chlopecka
Institution:1. Trace Element Laboratory, Institute of Soil Science and Plant Cultivation, 24-100, Pulawy, Poland
Abstract:Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) was grown on a sandy soil given different doses of cadmium carbonate (salt), copper carbonate (malachite), lead carbonate (cerussite), and zinc carbonate (smithsonite) in a pot experiment conducted in a greenhouse. The element compounds were added to the soil in amounts equivalent to the following levels of the metals: Cd 5, 10, 50 μq ?1; Cu and Pb 50, 100, 500 μg g?1; Zn 150, 300, 1500 μg g?1. Sequential extraction was used for partition these metals into five operationally-defined fractions: exchangeable, bound to carbonates, bound to Fe-Mn oxides, bound to organic matter and residual. The residue was the most abundant fraction in the untreated soil for all the metals studied (43 to 61% of the total contents). The concentration of exchangeable Cd (0.2 μg g?1), Cu (0.01 μg g?1), Pb (0.1 μg g?1), and Zn (1.4 μg g?1) were relatively low in the untreated soil but increased markedly in the treated soils for Cd (up to 31 μg g?1) and Zn (up to 83 μg g?1), whereas only small changes were observed for Cu and Pb. The pot experiment showed a significant increase in the Cd and Zn contents of barley grown on the treated soils, but only small changes in Cu and Pb concentrations.
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