Highly toxic thallium in plants from the vicinity of Olkusz (Poland).

Ecotoxicol Environ Saf

Environmental Plant Pollution Laboratory, Department of Morphogenesis, Institute of Plant Experimental Biology, University of Warsaw, Miecznikowa 1, 02-096 Warsaw, Poland.

Published: September 2004

Thallium is a highly toxic metal that plays no role in the metabolism of plants or animals. Recent studies using small mammals and bird feathers as bioindicators demonstrated for the first time that animals from the vicinity of the Bolesław metal works near Olkusz (southern Poland) had large amounts of thallium in their tissues. Because of concern over these reports, four plant species (Plantago lanceolata, Biscutella laevigata, Dianthus carthusianorum, Silene vulgaris) growing wildly in the same area on a 100-year-old calamine waste heap, as well as the waste heap soil, were examined. The average concentration of thallium in the waste heap soil was 43 mgTl/kg dry wt, with the highest value 78 mg Tl/kg dry wt. P. lanceolata accumulated extremely large amounts of thallium (average, 65 mg Tl/kg dry wt; maximum 321 mg Tl/kg dry wt in roots). S. vulgaris and D. carthusianorum accumulated much less (averages, 10 and 6.5 mg Tl/kg dry wt, respectively). On the other hand, B. leavigata accumulated negligible amounts of thallium in its tissues. The concentration of thallium in plants (shoots, roots) from the calamine waste heap was 100-1000 times the level normally found in plants (0.05 mg Tl/kg dry wt). Possible sources of thallium are discussed and the urgent need for large-scale studies on thallium contamination of soils and vegetation in Poland, especially its southern regions, which are the most industrialized, is pointed out.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2003.12.009DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tl/kg dry
20
waste heap
16
amounts thallium
12
thallium
9
highly toxic
8
thallium plants
8
large amounts
8
thallium tissues
8
calamine waste
8
heap soil
8

Similar Publications

Bioturbation/bioirrigation effect on thallium released from reservoir sediment by different organism types.

Sci Total Environ

November 2015

State Key Laboratory of Environmental Aquatic Chemistry, Research Centre for Eco-Environmental Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, China. Electronic address:

Bioturbation can remobilize heavy metal in the sediments and may pose a risk for aquatic biota. The effects of bioturbation/bioirrigation by three different riverine organism types (Tubificid, Chironomid larvae, and Loach) on thallium release from contaminated sediment (10.0 ± 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Highly toxic thallium in plants from the vicinity of Olkusz (Poland).

Ecotoxicol Environ Saf

September 2004

Environmental Plant Pollution Laboratory, Department of Morphogenesis, Institute of Plant Experimental Biology, University of Warsaw, Miecznikowa 1, 02-096 Warsaw, Poland.

Thallium is a highly toxic metal that plays no role in the metabolism of plants or animals. Recent studies using small mammals and bird feathers as bioindicators demonstrated for the first time that animals from the vicinity of the Bolesław metal works near Olkusz (southern Poland) had large amounts of thallium in their tissues. Because of concern over these reports, four plant species (Plantago lanceolata, Biscutella laevigata, Dianthus carthusianorum, Silene vulgaris) growing wildly in the same area on a 100-year-old calamine waste heap, as well as the waste heap soil, were examined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to assess thallium (Tl) uptake into the aerial parts of selected crop species grown on French soils with high Tl content of pedogeochemical origin (0.3-40 mg Tl kg(-1) on a dry wt (DW) basis). Husked wheat and maize grains contained less than 4 microg Tl kg(-1) DW, but rape shoots accumulated Tl with a shoot-soil partition coefficient (PC) > 1, and rape seeds had PC > 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!