The potentional of plants to cleanup metals from an old landfill site

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Authors

  • Yahya Jani Linnaeus University, Sweden
  • Charlotte Marchand Biodiversity Centre of Montreal University, Canada
  • William Hogland Linnaeus University, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15626/Eco-Tech.2014.017

Keywords:

Phytoremediation, heavy metals, old landfill sites, soil pollution, timothy-grass

Abstract

Old landfill sites contain different hazardous materials like heavy metals which have the ability to affects the entire environment. These places are sometimes covered by plants to increase the stability of the soil and to reduce the effects of erosion. 15 soil samples (3 samples from each place) and 5-7 timothy-grass (Phleum pretense) plants from 5 different places were taken from an old landfill place in an active landfill site in Högbytorp /Sweden owned by Ragn-sells Group Company. XRF scanning was used to analyze the metal content of soil samples and of plants. High concentrations of metals were detected in the soil samples like Fe with an average of about 25000 ppm, Mn about 250 ppm and 2800 ppm of Ti. The plants results showed an average concentration of Fe in the shoots about 730 ppm, Mn about 60 ppm and Ti about 1760 ppm. On the other hand, the roots results showed an average concentration of about 10 000 ppm of Fe, about 160 ppm of Mn and 2200 ppm of Ti. These results gave the indication that the Timothy-grass has the ability to extract metals from contaminated soils and can help to cleanup these soils.

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Published

2017-01-31