Scientific Production Faculty

Manganese accumulation in plants of the mining zone of Hidalgo, Mexico



Vázquez Rodríguez, Gabriela Alejandra

2010

Juárez-Santillán L.F., Lucho-Constantino C.A., Vázquez-Rodríguez G.A., Cerón-Ubilla N.M. and Beltrán-Hernández R.I. (2010) Manganese accumulation in plants of the mining zone of Hidalgo, México. Bioresource Technology 101: 5836-5841. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2010.03.020


Abstract


Soil, sediments, water and plant samples from the mining zone of Molango were collected and analyzed and Mn-tolerant and Mn-accumulator plants were identified. Soil and sediments presented moderately alkaline and reducing conditions, a normal electrical conductivity, a sandy texture and medium-to-high cation exchange capacities. These properties favored the presence of Mn2+, which is the form most easily assimilated by plants, and the total Mn concentration (11,637106,104 mg kg?1 dried weight, DW) was at phytotoxic level. Water was also an important Mn source. Equisetum hyemale and Telypteris kunthii survived in the presence of such Mn concentrations using an exclusion strategy, while Cnidoscolus multilobus, Platanus mexicana, Solanum diversifolium, Asclepius curassavica L. and Pluchea sympitifolia employed an accumulation strategy. These plants could be useful to re-vegetate and stabilize Mn tailings in order to decrease the erosion effects.



Research Product




Related articles

Standardization of activated sludge for biodegradation tests

A method for measuring the anoxic biodegradability under denitrifying conditions

Modeling of the biodegradation kinetics of phenol by aerial granules

STUDY OF THE REACTIVE DISTILLATION PROCESS IN THE HYDRODESULFURIZATION OF GAS OIL TO PRODUCE DIESEL...

Manganese accumulation in plants of the mining zone of Hidalgo, Mexico

MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF CATALYST KINETICS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF ULTRA-LOW-SULFUR DIESEL...

Physical degradation of barley (Hordeum sativun Jess) starch. Correlation between gelatinization...

Toward a standardization of the microbial inoculum for ready biodegradability testing of chemicals

3D reconstruction of Artificially Structured Microbial Consortia (ASMC) by image analysis

Two-step modeling of the biodegradation of phenol by an acclimated activated sludge