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Stomata and plant water relations: does air pollution create problems?
1998
Mansfield, T.A. (Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of Environmental and Natural Sciences, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ (United Kingdom))
Leaves of higher plants as biomonitors of radionuclides (¹³⁷Cs, ⁴⁰K, ²¹⁰Pb and ⁷Be) in urban air
2013
Todorović, Dragana | Popović, Dragana | Ajtić, Jelena | Nikolić, Jelena
Leaves of linden (Tilia tomentosa L. and Tilia cordata Mill.) and horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum L.) were analysed as biomonitors of radionuclides in urban air. Samples of soils, leaves and aerosols were collected in Belgrade, Serbia. Activities of ¹³⁷Cs, ⁴⁰K, ²¹⁰Pb and ⁷Be in the samples were measured on an HPGe detector by standard gamma spectrometry. “Soil-to-leaves” transfer factors were calculated. Student’s t test and linear Pearson correlation coefficients were used for statistical analysis. Differences in local conditions at the sampling sites were not significant, and the mechanisms of the radionuclides’ accumulation in both plant species are similar. Ceasium-137 was detected in some of the leaf samples only. Transfer factors for ¹³⁷Cs and ⁴⁰K were (0.03–0.08) and 1.3, respectively. The concentrations of ²¹⁰Pb and ⁷Be in leaves were higher in autumn than in spring, and there were some similarities in their seasonal patterns in leaves and in air. Weak to medium correlation was obtained for the ²¹⁰Pb and ⁷Be activities in leaves and aerosols. Large positive correlation was obtained for the ²¹⁰Pb activities in linden leaves and the mean activity in aerosols for the preceding months. Different primary modes of radionuclides accumulation in leaves were observed. Since large positive correlation was obtained for the ²¹⁰Pb activity in linden leaves and the mean in aerosols for the preceding months, mature linden leaves could be used as biomonitors of recent ²¹⁰Pb activity in air.
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