Cadmium induced changes in Solidago chilensis Meyen (Asteraceae) grown on organically fertilized soil with reference to mycorrhizae, metabolism, anatomy and ultrastructure.

Autor: Pereira, Lidiane Silva1 lidiegas@hotmail.com, de Araújo, Romária Pereira2 roaraujo_bio@yahoo.com.br, de Oliveira, Priscila Souza3 priscilagronoma@gmail.com, da Silva, Leandro Dias3 leodias5@yahoo.com.br, Alves, Patricia Alves Casaes1 thyssa@gmail.com, Fernandes, Valéria Ferreira4 val_bio1@hotmail.com, Gross, Eduardo5 egross@uesc.br
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecotoxicology & Environmental Safety. Apr2018, Vol. 150, p76-85. 10p.
Abstrakt: Solidago chilensis Meyen (Asteraceae) is a medicinal important plant with few studies on nutrition and metabolism and none information on cadmium phytotoxicity. The objective of this study was to investigate Cd induced responses on the growth and metabolism in S. chilensis and on arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM). The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse, consisting of a 5 × 4 factorial with five doses of manure (0, 3.5, 7, 14 and 21 g dm −3 ) and four doses of cadmium (0, 25, 50 and 75 mg dm −3 ) applied to a Dystrophic Ultisol. After 250 days of plant cultivation, biomass, nutrient content, photosynthetic rate, guaiacol peroxidase activity, mycorrhizal colonization, glomalin content, anatomical and ultrastucture were evaluated. Plants were significantly affected by interaction of manure and Cd doses with anatomical, ultrastructural, physiological and nutritional modifications. Manure applied into Cd contaminated soil significantly improved mycorrhizal colonization and glomalin production. The highest organic manure dose (21 g dm −3 ) alleviated toxicity symptoms of Cd on S. chilensis . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE