Uptake of Metals by Plants Sharing a Rhizosphere with the Hyperaccumulator Thlaspi caerulescens

ABSTRACT The hyperaccumulator Thlaspi caerulescens was grown with Hordeum vulgare and Lepidium heterophyllum in a split pot experiment to examine the effect of rhizosphere interactions on metal uptake. The objective was to assess the viability of such intercropping as either (1) a system of ‘phytoprotection’ for nonaccumulating plants or (2) a means of enhancing phytoextraction with large-biomass crops through increased metal mobilization within the shared rhizosphere. The plants were separated by (1) an impermeable barrier, (2) a permeable root barrier, or (3) no physical barrier to allow different degrees of root interaction. Studies of rhizosphere effects using split pot experiments are subject to considerable uncertainty by the need to relate test results to appropriate control plants. This was resolved by comparing plant metal concentrations to ‘equivalent’ control plants, with the same yield, based on the observed variation in metal concentration with yield under similar growing conditions. Cadmium concentration in H. vulgare was increased by a factor of 2.4 when it was grown alongside T. caerulescens without a barrier. In contrast, the uptake of zinc by H. vulgare was significantly decreased, probably through metal depletion within the zone of the Zn-hyperaccumulator's rhizosphere. T. caerulescens also apparently increased the concentration of Cd in H. vulgare by a factor of 1.4 when the roots of the two plants were separated by a permeable barrier that allowed movement of soil solution but prevented physical mixing of roots. The concentrations of all the metals studied (Cd, Zn, Cu, Pb, Ni) were greater in T. caerulescens when the hyperaccumulator was grown alongside either L. heterophyllum or H. vulgare without a root barrier — probably through successful exploitation of a greater volume of soil. However, this effect was not seen in the presence of a partial barrier, except in the case of Cu when T. caerulescens was grown alongside H. vulgare. These results suggest that T. caerulescens may alter conditions in shared rhizospheres and thereby affect the availability of selected metals to neighboring plants. Thus, it is possible that under-sowing some plants with small hyperaccumulators may potentially offer an alternative form of management for marginally contaminated soils. There was limited evidence of an intercropped hyperaccumulator mobilizing selected metals and restricting the availability of others. However, changes in uptake of selected metals by the larger plant may be quite small compared with the requirements of crop protection or the short-term requirements of many land remediation programs.

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