A field study of the ecotoxicology of copper to bryophytes.

Environ Pollut

School of Biological and Earth Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Byrom Street, Liverpool L3 3AF UK.

Published: August 1999

The impact of particulate copper, emitted from a copper rod-rolling plant, on the distribution of common grassland bryophytes has been investigated. Several areas of managed grassland, differing in total and water-extractable soil copper content, surrounding the factory were surveyed to establish species composition and distribution of the bryophyte flora. Clear differences emerged in the distribution patterns of the main acrocarpous (upright/tufted growth form) and pleurocarpous (horizontal/spreading growth form) species present, with some species being more or less confined to soils with elevated copper (Pohlia nutans), whilst others were absent from such sites. The distribution of acrocarpous species was not related to increasing soil copper concentrations, whereas pleurocarpous species showed considerable sensitivity. This may not be a simple reflection of sensitivity to copper; ecological factors such as differences in patterns of water and soluble copper uptake between the different growth forms may be significant factors, as may be changes in the vascular plant flora giving rise to differences in population densities of potential competitors between sites. Pleurocarpous species are absent from grassland where total soil copper >550 microg g(-1) dry weight, whilst the less sensitive acrocarpous species occur at total soil copper levels in excess of 2000 microg g(-1) dry weight.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0269-7491(99)00080-9DOI Listing

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