Assessing the impact of geogenic chromium uptake by carrots (Daucus carota) grown in Asopos river basin

 
This item is provided by the institution :

Repository :
Institutional Repository Technical University of Crete
see the original item page
in the repository's web site and access all digital files if the item*
share




2017 (EN)

Assessing the impact of geogenic chromium uptake by carrots (Daucus carota) grown in Asopos river basin (EN)

Λιλλη Μαρια (EL)
Συρανιδου Ευδοκια (EL)
Παλλιου Ανδριανα (EL)
Νικολαιδης Νικολαος (EL)
Καρατζας Γιωργος (EL)
Καλογερακης Νικος (EL)
Palliou Andriana (EN)
Lilli Maria (EN)
Kalogerakis Nikos (EN)
Syranidou Evdokia (EN)
Karatzas Giorgos (EN)
Nikolaidis Nikolaos (EN)

Πολυτεχνείο Κρήτης (EL)
Technical University of Crete (EN)

A methodology was developed to assess the impact of geogenic origin hexavalent chromium uptake by carrots, and the risk of human consumption of carrots grown in Asopos River basin in Greece. A field scale experiment was conducted with carrots cultivated in treatment plots, with and without compost amendment, in order to assess the impact of carbon in the mobility and uptake of chromium by plants. The results suggested that there is a trend for chromium mobilization and uptake in the surface and the leaves of the carrots cultivated in the treatment plot with the higher carbon addition, but not in the core of the carrots. Limited mobility of hexavalent chromium in the soil-plant-water system is presented due to the affinity of chromium to be retained in the solid phase and be uptaken by plants. Hexavalent chromium tolerant bacterial strains were isolated from the carrots. These endophytic bacteria, present in all parts of the plant, were able to reduce hexavalent chromium to trivalent form to levels below the detection limit. Finally, a site-specific risk assessment analysis suggested no adverse effects to human health due to the consumption of carrots. These findings are of particular importance since they confirm that carrots grown in soils with geogenic origin chromium does not pose any adverse risk for human consumption, but could also have the beneficial effect of the micronutrient trivalent chromium. (EN)

journalArticle

Carrots (EN)
Risk assessment (EN)
Geogenic chromium (EN)
Endophytic bacteria (EN)
Uptake (EN)


Environmental Research (EL)

English

2017


Elsevier (EN)




*Institutions are responsible for keeping their URLs functional (digital file, item page in repository site)