Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://cris.library.msu.ac.zw//handle/11408/4397
Title: Spatial variation of heavy metals and uptake potential by Typha domingensis in a tropical reservoir in the midlands region, Zimbabwe
Authors: Dube, Trevor
Mhangwa, Grace
Makaka, Caston
Parirenyatwa, Bridget
Muteveri, Tinashe
Keywords: Bioaccumulation
Heavy metals
Macrophytes
Pollution
Reservoir
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Springer Verlag
Series/Report no.: Environmental Science and Pollution Research;Vol.26 ; No.10 :p.10097-10105
Abstract: Pollution of aquatic ecosystems with heavy metals is now of global concern due to their dangers to human health and persistence in the environment. An investigation on the spatial distribution of heavy metals in water and sediments and the bioaccumulation potential of heavy metals by plant parts (i.e. roots, stems and leaves) of aquatic macrophyte Typha domingensis (Pers.) Steud in a tropical reservoir was carried out. The results showed no difference in spatial distribution of heavy metals (Fe, Cu, Cd, Cr, Pb, Zn, Mn) in water and sediments from the riverine to the dam wall. The concentration of heavy metals Fe, Cu, Cr and Zn in T. domingensis was of the order root > stem > leaves, but for Pb, Cd and Mn, it followed the order root > leaf > stem. The metal transfer between roots and shoots of T. domingensis followed the order Zn > Pb > Fe > Cu > Cd > Cr. The bio-concentration factor (BCF) was low (BCF < 1) for all the selected metals while the transfer factor (TF) varied among metals suggesting that T. domingensis is not an accumulator of the studied metals. The high concentration of heavy metals found in the water (0.7-16.14 mg L-1) and sediments (43.6-569.18 mg kg-1) present a potential risk to both ecological health and human health for the population living in the area. The results of metal concentration in water and sediments from this study are important as a baseline for future monitoring studies. Further studies on bioavailability of metals to other macrophytes and aquatic organisms are recommended.
URI: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30756354/
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4397
ISSN: 1614-7499
Appears in Collections:Research Papers

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