Rendiconti Online della Società Geologica Italiana - Vol. 38/2016

Studying potentially toxic trace elements in soil-plant system: a case study of an olive orchard in southern Italy (Calabria)

Ilaria Guagliardi (a), Nicola Ricca (a), Loredana Bastone (a), Maria Grazia Cipriani (a), Donata. Civitelli (a), Anna Lia Gabriele (a) & Gabriele Buttafuoco (a)
(a) National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Agricultural and Forest Systems in the Mediterranean (ISAFOM), Via Cavour 4/6, 87036 Rende, CS, Italy. Corresponding author e-mail: ilaria.guagliardi@isafom.cnr.it


Volume: 38/2016
Pages: 59-61

Abstract

Soil to plant Transfer Factors (TFs) are commonly used to estimate the food chain transfer of chemical elements. The entry of trace contaminants, such as potentially toxic trace elements (PTEs), from soil into human food chains, is controlled by their uptake by plant roots in the long term. Some PTEs in the soil-plant system were studied through the TFs in an olive orchard in southern Italy. Soil samples and olive leaves were collected and analysed for Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn by using Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS). In addition, pH, electrical conductivity, organic matter, clay content and cation exchange capacity were measured in soil samples. Factor of trace elements from soil to olive plants showed average value <1, suggesting less uptake of PTEs from soil.

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