Analysis
of stable metal isotopes can provide important information
on biogeochemical processes in the soil–plant system. Here,
we conducted a repeated phytoextraction experiment using the cadmium
(Cd) hyperaccumulator Sedum plumbizincicola X. H. Guo et S. B. Zhou ex L. H. Wu (Crassulaceae) in four different
Cd-contaminated agricultural soils over five consecutive crops. Isotope
composition of Cd was determined in the four soils before and after
the fifth crop, in the plant shoots harvested in all soils in the
first crop, and in the NH4OAc extracts of two contrasting
soils with large differences in soil pH (5.73 and 7.32) and clay content
(20.4 and 31.3%) before and after repeated phytoextraction. Before
phytoextraction NH4OAc-extractable Cd showed a slight but
significant negative isotope fractionation or no fractionation compared
with total Cd (Δ114/110Cdextract‑soil = −0.15 ± 0.05 (mean ± standard error) and 0.01
± 0.01‰), and the extent of fractionation varied with
soil pH and clay content. S. plumbizincicola preferentially took up heavy Cd from soils (Δ114/110Cdshoot‑soil = 0.02–0.14‰), and heavy
isotopes were significantly depleted in two soils after repeated phytoextraction
(Δ114/110Cdsoil:P5‑soil:P0 = −0.15
± 0.02 and −0.12 ± 0.01‰). This provides evidence
for the existence of specific Cd transporters in S.
plumbizincicola, leading to positive isotope fractionation
during uptake. After phytoextraction by five sequential crops, the
NH4OAc-extractable Cd pool was significantly enriched in
heavy isotopes (Δ114/110Cdextract:P5‑extract:P0 = 0.07 ± 0.02 and 0.18 ± 0.05‰) despite the preferential
uptake of heavy isotopes, indicating the occurrence of root-induced
Cd mobilization in soils, which is supposed to favor heavy Cd in the
organo-complexes with root exudates. Our results demonstrate that
Cd is taken up by S. plumbizincicola via specific transporters, partly after active mobilization from
the more strongly bound soil pool such as iron/manganese (hydr)oxide-bound
Cd during repeated phytoextraction. This renders S.
plumbizincicola a suitable plant for large-scale field
phytoremediation.
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