Evaluation of High Andean Plant Species in the Absorption and Translocation of Heavy Metals in the Moorlands of Reten IchuBamba, Ecuador
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vaca-Cárdenas, Maritza Lucía; González-Cabrera, María Verónica; Andino-Peñafiel, Erica Estefania; Guallpa-Calva, Miguel Ángel; Vasco-Lucio, Martha Marisol; Vaca-Cárdenas, Pedro Vicente; Muñoz-Jácome, Eduardo Antonio; Zavala-Toscano, Carmen Alicia; Ati-Cutiupala, Guicela Margoth; Cushquicullma-Colcha, Diego FranciscoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Phytoremediation Heavy metals Translocation Hyperaccumulative Absorption
Fecha
2025-07-07Referencia bibliográfica
Vaca-Cárdenas, M.L.; González-Cabrera, M.V.; AndinoPeñafiel, E.E.; Guallpa-Calva, M.Á.; Vasco-Lucio, M.M.; Vaca-Cárdenas, P.V.; Muñoz-Jácome, E.A.; ZavalaToscano, C.A.; Ati-Cutiupala, G.M.; Cushquicullma-Colcha, D.F. Evaluation of High Andean Plant Species in the Absorption and Translocation of Heavy Metals in the Moorlands of Reten IchuBamba, Ecuador. Conservation 2025, 5, 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/ conservation5030034
Patrocinador
Escuela Superior Politécnica de Chimborazo (DI-ESPOCH; project IDIPI-324)Resumen
Phytoremediation is based on the use of plants to decontaminate water and soil. In this
work, the capacity of high Andean vegetation in the absorption and translocation of
heavy metals was analyzed. Species were identified to analyze the presence of metals in
roots, stems, and leaves by spectrometry. The translocation factor was determined and
analyzed by means of pattern clusters. Based on the floristic inventory, the dominance
of the Poaceae and Asteraceae families was determined, and 12 plant species with a high
importance value were selected. According to the ICP-AES, mercury (951.07 mg/kg) was
determined in the roots of Lachemilla orbiculata, and chromium (21.88 mg/kg) in Carex
bonplandii. Arsenic (2.79 mg/kg) was detected as being significantly higher than the values
recorded in lowland plants. Cadmium mobility was high in all species, reaching higher
values in Baccharis salicifolia (86.28%) and Calamagrostis intermedia (37.16%). Rumex acetocella
accumulated lead in leaves (9.27%), while Taraxacum officinale (1.20%) and Calamagrostis
intermedia (1.20%) accumulated silicon. Stabilization of chromium, mercury, and sodium
was determined in the roots without translocation to higher organs. Finally, cluster analysis
showed physiological interactions between metals as a toxicity mitigation mechanism
affecting mobility. These findings suggest that they are hyperaccumulator species.





