DIFFERENCES IN THE CADMIUM CONTENT OF SOME COMMON WESTERN-AUSTRALIAN PASTURE PLANTS GROWN IN A SOIL AMENDED WITH CADMIUM - DESCRIBING THE EFFECTS OF LEVEL OF CADMIUM SUPPLY

Citation
Rgv. Bramley et Nj. Barrow, DIFFERENCES IN THE CADMIUM CONTENT OF SOME COMMON WESTERN-AUSTRALIAN PASTURE PLANTS GROWN IN A SOIL AMENDED WITH CADMIUM - DESCRIBING THE EFFECTS OF LEVEL OF CADMIUM SUPPLY, Fertilizer research, 39(2), 1994, pp. 113-122
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
Journal title
ISSN journal
01671731
Volume
39
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
113 - 122
Database
ISI
SICI code
0167-1731(1994)39:2<113:DITCCO>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
The uptake of cadmium (Cd) by capeweed (Arctotheca calendula), subterr anean clover (Trifolium subterraneum), santiago medic (Medicago santia go), wimmera ryegrass (Lolium rigidum) and kikuyu grass (Pennisetum cl andestunum) was measured over an eight week period following seedling emergence from a loamy sand amended with nine concentrations of Cd (0- 50 mug g-1). The uptake of Cd from soil amended with either 0 or 1 mug Cd g-1 was also measured at 7 day intervals over the eight week growi ng period. With the exception of wimmera ryegrass, yields were reduced by addition of Cd, and this reduction could be described by simple li near or quadratic equations. Addition of Cd increased the concentratio n of Cd in plants and the increase could be described using a rescaled Mitscherlich function. However, the accumulation of Cd at high levels of addition was depressed due to the effect of Cd supply on yield and a modified function was used to describe this effect. The concentrati on of Cd in tops (mug g-1) did not vary markedly with plant age. For C d additions corresponding to typical levels of plant-available Cd in W estern Australian (WA) pasture soils, the concentration of Cd in tops harvested six or eight weeks after emergence was about four times grea ter in capeweed than in subterranean clover or kikuyu, and about eight times greater than in wimmera ryegrass or santiago medic. However, be cause of differences in the moisture content of tops, there was only a threefold difference in the potential contribution to the Cd burden o f grazing sheep between capeweed or subterranean clover at typical lev els of soil Cd. For most plants, Cd concentrations in roots were about ten times greater than in tops, except in capeweed which translocated more of the Cd taken up to tops. A reduction in the Cd burden of graz ing animals in WA would most likely be achieved by the production of p astures that are low in capeweed and dominated by species which can su rvive the drier periods of the grazing season.