2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.11.020
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The influence of liming on soil chemical properties and on the alleviation of manganese and copper toxicity in Juglans regia, Robinia pseudoacacia, Eucalyptus sp. and Populus sp. plantations

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Cited by 31 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Exposure of liming to Juglans regia, Robinia pseudoacacia, Eucalyptus sp., and Populus sp. plantations reported to alleviate Mn and Cu toxicity (Chatzistathis et al, 2015). Hajiboland et al (2013) reported about the role of aluminum (300 µm) in reducing Fe toxicity in tea plant.…”
Section: Ameliorating Mechanism Of Benificial Heavy Metal Toxicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exposure of liming to Juglans regia, Robinia pseudoacacia, Eucalyptus sp., and Populus sp. plantations reported to alleviate Mn and Cu toxicity (Chatzistathis et al, 2015). Hajiboland et al (2013) reported about the role of aluminum (300 µm) in reducing Fe toxicity in tea plant.…”
Section: Ameliorating Mechanism Of Benificial Heavy Metal Toxicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Means with the same letter for given period do not differ significantly Figure 3C) increased under the treatments T2 (soil + liming) and T4 (soil + fertilizer + liming), possibly because of the benefits of soil liming, such as the improvement in P mineralization, increase in mineralization, N nitrification (Chatzistathis et al, 2015).…”
Section: Bmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Although Brazil is a global example of native seedlings production for forest restoration and implementation of largescale restoration programs, there is a lack of studies on white sands ecosystems (Bernardino et al 2007, Macedo & Teixeira 2011, Coneglian et al 2016. On the other hand, the effect of liming on soil acidity, nutrient availability and plant responses have been thoroughly reported in agricultural and silvicultural investigations (Chatzistathis et al 2015, Tiritan et al 2016. The few studies in the Atlantic white sand forests (Restinga) that evaluate liming for seedling production point out that native species show a variety of responses to liming and nutrientpoor environments and, in most cases, native species benefited from the reduction in soil acidity, as observed for the averages of treatments V40 and V70 in our study (Tab.…”
Section: Iforest -Biogeosciences and Forestrymentioning
confidence: 99%