Bioaccumulation of cadmium, copper and lead by Hydrilla (Hydrilla vericillata)
Date
Authors
Adviser
Committee Chair
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Degree Grantor
Shelf Location
Abstract
Bioaccumulation of cadmium, copper, and lead by Hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata) were tested to 5 different initial concentrations. The water contaminant sample was composed of mixed cadmium, copper and lead metals supplied as nitrate salts. These were analyzed for the decrease in concentrations at 24-hour intervals for 5 days using the SpectrAA 55B Atomic Absorption Spectrometer. Plants exposed only for 5 days were digested and analyzed. The plant growth was normal at lower concentrations and showed higher removal efficiency. H. verticillata showed maximum removal percentage on the 5th day of exposure at 5 mg L-1 for cadmium (90.47%) and copper (95.20%) but for lead was on the 1st day (96.74%). The order of metal ion removal and the actual uptake for the three metals by H. verticillata is Pb>Cu>Cd, but at lower concentration, cadmium was absorbed more than copper. The copper and lead uptakes by H. verticillata are superior as compared to other aquatic plants uptakes. Lead uptake at higher concentrations might be due to physicochemical adsorption of the metal to the plant components and not on metabolism-mediated uptake, because plant condition does not have an adverse effect on the uptake
Description
Keyword
AGROVOC Keyword
Subject
Citation
Baniago, A. C. (2007). Bioaccumulation of cadmium, copper and lead by Hydrilla (Hydrilla vericillata) [Undergraduate theses, University of the Philippines Visayas]. UPV Institutional Repository. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14583/560
