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Plant growth responses to inorganic environmental contaminants are density-dependent: Experiments with copper sulfate, barley and lettuce
Environmental Pollution (2014)
  • Mari Hansi, University of Helsinki
  • Jeffrey D Weidenhamer, Ashland University
  • Ari Sinkkonen
Abstract
The density-dependence of terrestrial plant-plant interactions in the presence of toxins has previously been explored using biodegradable compounds. We exposed barley and lettuce to four copper concentrations at four stand densities. We hypothesized that toxin effects would decrease and Cu uptake would increase at increasing plant densities. We analyzed toxin effects by (a) comparing plant biomasses and (b) using a recent regression model that has a separate parameter for the interaction of resource competition and toxin interference. Plant response to Cu was density-dependent in both experiments. Total Cu uptake by barley increased and the dose per plant decreased as plant density increased. This study is the first to demonstrate that plant density mediates plant response to metals in soil in a predictable way. This highlights the need to explore the mechanisms for and consequences of these effects, and to integrate the use of several plant densities into standard ecotoxicological testing.
Keywords
  • Barley,
  • Cooper Sulfate Density--response bioassey,
  • Lettuce,
  • Plant density,
  • Toxin dilution
Disciplines
Publication Date
2014
Citation Information
Mari Hansi, Jeffrey D Weidenhamer and Ari Sinkkonen. "Plant growth responses to inorganic environmental contaminants are density-dependent: Experiments with copper sulfate, barley and lettuce" Environmental Pollution Vol. 184 (2014)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jeffrey_weidenhamer/23/