2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2014.02.012
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Lead isotopic signatures of saprotrophic macrofungi of various origins: Tracing for lead sources and possible applications in geomycology

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Cited by 26 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The distribution and activity of fungal mycelia in the soil profile likely differ among species and can only be studied by use of molecular methods [65][66][67]. It can be expected that the chemical action of fungi driven by enzymes [68] and organic acids [9] influences various element soil fractions and that the elements can be transported from various soil depths [69,70]. Moreover, the element uptake in macrofungi appears highly species-dependent as reported for various elements and fungal species: Ag in Amanita spp.…”
Section: Macrofungimentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The distribution and activity of fungal mycelia in the soil profile likely differ among species and can only be studied by use of molecular methods [65][66][67]. It can be expected that the chemical action of fungi driven by enzymes [68] and organic acids [9] influences various element soil fractions and that the elements can be transported from various soil depths [69,70]. Moreover, the element uptake in macrofungi appears highly species-dependent as reported for various elements and fungal species: Ag in Amanita spp.…”
Section: Macrofungimentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The uptake of metals depends primarily on mushroom species, but also on other factors, such as concentration of metals in the substrate, pH, the amount of organic matter, and morphological part of fruiting body, development stage, age of mycelium, and interval between the fructifications (Işıloğlu et al 2001;Kalač et al 1996).There is a direct relationship between Pb concentrations in mushrooms and soil contamination due to traffic pollution (Borovička et al 2014;Ettler et al 2004;Falandysz and Treu 2017;García et al 1998;Hamelin et al 1997).The vast majority of the wild growing mushrooms and among the species of the genera Agaricus, Macrolepiota, or Boletus accumulated extremely high amounts of lead in urban areas (Schlecht and Säumel 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This article contains a bibliometric analysis of 200 European publications about the concentrations of selected elements in mushrooms that were published between 2001 and 2016. We evaluated these articles relying on some important aspects: the edibility of mushrooms (edible and non-edible/poisonous species), the most studied elements (type, incidence, and concentration in the fruiting body), and health risks Baumann et al 2014;Borovička et al 2014;Drewnowska et al 2014;Dryżałowska and Falandysz 2014;Gezer and Kaygusuz 2014;Kubrová et al 2014;Llorente-Mirandes et al 2014;Melgar et al 2014;Nagy et al 2014;Rakić et al 2014;Sácký et al 2014;Širić et al 2014 Czech Republic,…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%