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. 2019 Mar 5;53(5):2441-2449.
doi: 10.1021/acs.est.8b06222. Epub 2019 Feb 15.

Uptake and Fractionation of Thallium by Brassica juncea in a Geogenic Thallium-Amended Substrate

Affiliations

Uptake and Fractionation of Thallium by Brassica juncea in a Geogenic Thallium-Amended Substrate

Shelby T Rader et al. Environ Sci Technol. .

Abstract

This study shows thallium (Tl) concentrations in Brassica juncea (Indian mustard) tissue are more than an order of magnitude higher (3830 μg/kg) than that of the substrate (100 μg/kg) and are strongly influenced by the underlying mineralogy; i.e., Tl bioaccessibility depends on the mineral structure: K-feldspar > Mn nodule > hendricksite mica. The majority of Tl for all substrates is contained in edible parts of the plant, i.e., leaves (41% of total Tl, on average) ≥ flower stems (34%) > seed pods (11%) ≈ stems (10%) > flowers (3%). We also show that Tl isotope fractionation induced by B. juncea is substantial, at nearly 10 ε205Tl units, and generates systematic plant-specific patterns. Progressive plant growth strongly fractionates Tl isotopes, discriminating against 205Tl as the plant matures. Thus, 205Tl values are systematically higher in the early formed stem (ε205Tlavg = +2.5) than in plant elements formed later (ε205Tlavg = -2.5 to +0.1), which demonstrates the large degree of translocation and the associated effects during plant growth. This study establishes the potential of Tl isotopes as a new tool for understanding heavy metal (re)distribution during anthropogenic and geologic processes and the utility of such information in environmental and health-related planning and in phytomining or bioprospecting.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
[Tl] of plant parts for various Tl-amended substrates. Numbers next to individual plant parts denote the average [Tl] for that plant part in μg/kg. A.-B. depicts Tl added as a NIST-997 standard solution at two concentrations. C.-E. depicts Tl added as three various mineral substrates. Each mineral substrate was added to a total concentration of 20 mg/kg per pot. Control plants were below detection (not shown here). Note the two scales to more accurately compare high-concentration (A.-B.) and low-concentration (C.-E.) plants.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Distribution of total Tl contents (Table 1) within Brassica juncea from five unique Tl-amendments. Amendments shown here include two concentrations of NIST 997 Tl standard solution, amazonite (feldspar) from Amelia Courthouse, VA, hendricksite (mica) from Sterling Hill, NJ, and manganese nodule, NOD-A-1, a USGS reference material.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
ε205Tl values of plant parts for two NIST-997 Tl-amended substrates. NIST-997 ε205Tl = +0.0. Numbers next to individual plant parts denote the average ε205Tl values for that plant part.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
ε205Tl values measured for various parts of B. juncea after 12 weeks of growth in a controlled greenhouse. Tl addition was added incrementally utilizing a NIST 997 Tl standard solution with a known isotopic value of ε205Tl = +0.0. Shown here are the results of both the 20 μg/kg NIST 997 solution and 100 μg/kg NIST 997 solution trials.

References

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