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Geochemical partitioning and bioavailability of...
Journal article

Geochemical partitioning and bioavailability of copper to aquatic plants in an artificial oxide-organic sediment

Abstract

This study investigated the effects of competition between binding substrates (organic matter and iron oxide) and between metals (cadmium and copper), on the partitioning of sedimentary copper and its subsequent bioavailability to an aquatic plant. Organic matter and a synthesized iron oxide, ferrihydrite, were added singly and in combination to a series of sand sediments, which were then dosed with environmentally realistic concentrations of cadmium and copper and planted with rice,Oryza sativa.Organic matter controlled copper partitioning and bioavailability, whereas the synthetic ferrihydrite bound negligible amounts of either metal, even in the absence of organic matter. As organic matter concentrations increased, operationally-defined leachable copper decreased, organic-associated copper increased and the survival of rice plants improved in an approximately linear fashion. At a nominal starting copper concentration of 5.8 µg g dry wt−1, plant survival after four weeks averaged 0–8% in sediments without organic matter, 25% in a sediment containing 0.18% organic matter and 58% in a sediment containing 0.36% organic matter. These results suggest that organic-associated forms of copper are unavailable to plants, and that the operational definition of ‘leachable’ copper (extracted with dilute ammonium acetate) adequately represents the species of copper that is (are) available to plants. Our study using a well-characterized artificial sediment supports the copper fractionation patterns and correlations between copper partitioning and bioavailability reported from the heterogeneous, poorly characterized sediments of natural lake and river sediments.

Authors

Warren LA; Outridge PM; Zimmerman AP

Journal

Hydrobiologia, Vol. 304, No. 3, pp. 197–207

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

May 1, 1995

DOI

10.1007/bf02329314

ISSN

0018-8158

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