Plant Colonization and Arsenic Uptake on High Arsenic Mine Wastes, New Zealand

被引:0
作者
Dave Craw
Cathy Rufaut
Laura Haffert
Lorraine Paterson
机构
[1] University of Otago,Geology Department
来源
Water, Air, and Soil Pollution | 2007年 / 179卷
关键词
phytoremediation; phytostabilisation; revegetation; arsenic; antimony; metalloid; hyperaccumulation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Substrates associated with two historic gold mining sites in north Westland, New Zealand, have locally very high arsenic concentrations (commonly 10–40 wt% As). The substrates consist of iron oxyhydroxide precipitates, and processing mill residues. Waters associated with some of these substrates have high dissolved arsenic (commonly 10–50 mg/L As). Natural revegetation of these very high arsenic sites has occurred over the past 50 years, although some areas of substrate remain bare. Revegetating species include native and adventive shrubs, adventive grasses, rushes, and mosses, and native ferns. Revegetation by higher plants follows initial colonization by mosses, and some shrubs are growing directly in high-arsenic substrate. Shrubs, especially manuka (Leptospermum scoparium), gorse (Ulex europaeus), tree fuchsia (Fuchsia excorticata) and broadleaf (Griselinia littoralis) largely exclude arsenic from their shoots (< 10 mg/kg dry weight) irrespective of the As content of the substrate. Likewise, most grasses, and reeds (Juncus spp.), have only modest As contents (typically < 100 mg/kg dry weight). However, mosses growing on high-arsenic substrates have strongly elevated arsenic contents (> 0.2% dry weight). In particular, the moss Pohlia wahlenbergii acts as a hyperaccumulator, with up to 3% (dry weight) As. Antimony (Sb) contents of all plants are about one thousandth of that of arsenic, reflecting the As/Sb ratio of the substrates. Plant establishment in the high-As substrates may be locally limited by low nutrient status, rather than arsenic toxicity. The shrubs, grasses, and reeds identified in this study are arsenic tolerant and largely exclude arsenic from their shoots so that revegetation with these species, can help to isolate the high-arsenic substrates from the surface environment. These species could be used as phytostabilisation agents on high-arsenic sites that are remote from human habitation. In contrast, the mosses, despite their high arsenic tolerance, are a less desirable component of revegetation of high-arsenic substrates because they actively transfer arsenic from the substrate to the biosphere.
引用
收藏
页码:351 / 364
页数:13
相关论文
共 72 条
[1]  
Ashley P. M.(1999)Arsenic contamination at the Mole River mine, northern New South Wales Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 46 861-874
[2]  
Lottermoser B. G.(1981)Accumulators and excluders: Strategies in the response of plants to trace metals Journal of Plant Nutrition 3 643-654
[3]  
Baker A. J. M.(1997)Restoration of mined lands – using natural processes Ecological Engineering 8 255-269
[4]  
Bradshaw A.(2003)A field study conducted at Kidston gold mine to evaluate the impact of arsenic and zinc from mine tailing to grazing cattle Toxicology Letters 137 23-34
[5]  
Bruce S. L.(2003)Hydrothermal alteration in meta sedimentary rock-hosted orogenic gold deposits, Reefton goldfield, South Island, New Zealand Mineralium Deposita 38 87-107
[6]  
Noller B. N.(2004)Geochemical controls on the environmental mobility of Sb and As at mesothermal antimony and gold deposits Transactions - Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. Section B. Applied Earth Sciences 113 B3-B10
[7]  
Grigg A. H.(2004)Plant community tolerant to trace elements growing on the degraded soils of São Domingos mine in the south east of Portugal: Environmental implications Environment International 30 65-72
[8]  
Mullen B. F.(1971)Urban bryophyte communities in northeast England Transactions of the British Bryological Society 6 306-316
[9]  
Mulligan D. R.(1917)The geology and mineral resources of the Reefton Subdivision, Westport and North Westland Subdivision New Zealand Geological Survey Bulletin 18 232-995
[10]  
Ritchie P. J.(2005)Comparison of arsenic and trace metal contents of discharges from adjacent coal and gold mines, Reefton, New Zealand Marine and Freshwater Research 56 983-350