JEQ Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in J Environ Qual 4:207-211 (1975)
© 1975 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Growth and Cadmium Accumulation of Plants Grown on a Soil Treated with a Cadmium-Enriched Sewage Sludge1

F. T. Bingham, A. L. Page, R. J. Mahler and T. J. Ganje2

ABSTRACT

Corn, wheat, rice, field bean, soybean, cabbage, spinach, lettuce, curlycress, carrot, turnip, radish, tomato, and squash plants were grown to commercial harvest stage using as the substrate, soil pre-treated with a municipal sewage sludge (1%) containing variable amounts of CdSO4 up to 640 µg Cd/g soil. Observations included injury symptoms, yield decrement, Cd level of diagnostic tissue, and Cd and Zn content of harvested produce. Cadmium-sensitive plants such as spinach, soybean, curlycress, and lettuce were injured by soil Cd levels of 4–13 µg Cd/g soil; whereas, tomato and cabbage tolerated soil levels of approximately 170 µg Cd/g soil without exhibiting injury symptoms. Rice was tolerant at all levels tested. Leafy plants such as lettuce, spinach, and turnip greens (tops) accumulated 175 to 354 µg Cd/g; whereas, fruit and seed tissue of plants under comparable treatment, with the exception of soybean, accumulated no more than 10 to 15 µg Cd/g tissue. The concentrations for soybean extended up to 30 µg Cd/g tissue. Paddy rice exhibited no ill effects for soil Cd treatments up to 640 µg Cd/g soil. Grain of plants under the 640 µg Cd/g treatment contained 2 µg Cd/g tissue. DPTA-extractable Cd correlated (r=0.99) with the level of CdSO4 added to the substrate.

Key Words: Cd availability • Cd toxicity for economic plants • DTPA extractable Cd


NOTES

1 Contribution of the Department of Soil Science and Agricultural Engineering, University of California, Riverside, CA 92502; presented before Div. A-5 and S-4, Soil Sci. Soc. Amer., Las Vegas, Nev. 13 Nov. 1973.

2 The first two authors are Professors of Soil Science and the latter are Research Associates.

Received for publication June 21, 1974.





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The SCI Journals Agronomy Journal Crop Science
Journal of Natural Resources
and Life Sciences Education
Vadose Zone Journal
Soil Science Society of America Journal Journal of Plant Registrations The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1975 by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.