Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Lanthanide concentrations in freshwater plants and molluscs, related to those in surface water, pore water and sediment. A case study in The Netherlands.
Weltje, Lennart; Heidenreich, Heike; Zhu, Wangzhao; Wolterbeek, Hubert Th; Korhammer, Siegfried; de Goeij, Jeroen J M; Markert, Bernd.
Afiliação
  • Weltje L; Department of Radiochemistry, Interfaculty Reactor Institute (IRI), Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. weltje@ihi-zittau.de
Sci Total Environ ; 286(1-3): 191-214, 2002 Mar 08.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11887873
ABSTRACT
Industrial emissions of lanthanides to aquatic ecosystems increase, but knowledge of the environmental fate of these metals is limited. Here we focus attention upon the distribution of lanthanides in freshwater ecosystems, describing lanthanide partitioning between sediment, water and biota. Since lanthanides are often used as oxidation-state analogues for actinides, their distribution can reflect long-term behaviour of the radioactive transuranics. Concentrations of all 14 naturally occurring lanthanides were measured by ICP-MS in Sago pondweed (Potamogeton pectinatus), common duckweed (Lemna minor), seven different mollusc species (tissue and shell), two sediment fractions (< 2 mm and < 63 microm), surface water and sediment pore water from five locations in The Netherlands. In all samples, the typical 'saw-tooth' lanthanide pattern was observed, which implies that lanthanides are transported as a coherent group through aquatic ecosystems. Typical deviations from this pattern were found for Ce and Eu and could be explained by their redox chemistry. The variation in concentrations in abiotic fractions was limited, i.e. within one order of magnitude. However, variations of up to three orders of magnitude were observed in biotic samples, suggesting different affinities among organisms for lanthanides as a group, with significant differences only among molluscs and pondweed samples in relation to sampling location. For P. pectinatus it was shown that pore water was the most important lanthanide source, and for snails, food (plants) seems to be the dominant lanthanide source. Lanthanides were not equally distributed between mollusc shell and tissue and the ratio of lanthanide concentrations in shell and tissue were dependent on the sampling location. Shells contained much lower concentrations and were relatively enriched in Eu, and to a lesser extent in Ce. Bioconcentration factors for lanthanides in plants and snails relative to surface water were typically between 10000 and 100000 l x kg(-1) dry matter, while sediment-water partition coefficients were between 100000 and 3000000 l x kg(-1) dry matter. There was a low extent of biomagnification in the plant-to-snail system, with a maximum biomagnification factor of 5.5. Many distribution coefficients displayed a slight decrease with atomic number. This can be attributed to the general increase in ligand stability constants with atomic number, keeping the heavier lanthanides preferentially in solution.
Assuntos
Buscar no Google
Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Plantas / Poluentes da Água / Monitoramento Ambiental / Elementos da Série dos Lantanídeos / Moluscos Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2002 Tipo de documento: Article
Buscar no Google
Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Plantas / Poluentes da Água / Monitoramento Ambiental / Elementos da Série dos Lantanídeos / Moluscos Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2002 Tipo de documento: Article