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  • Title: Growth conditions impact 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1-dichloroethylene (p,p'-DDE) accumulation by Cucurbita pepo.
    Author: Kelsey JW, Colino A, Koberle M, White JC.
    Journal: Int J Phytoremediation; 2006; 8(3):261-71. PubMed ID: 17120529.
    Abstract:
    Laboratory experiments were conducted to study the effects of soil moisture content, planting density, plant age, and the growth of multiple generations on the bioconcentration of weathered p,p'-DDE by the plant Cucurbita pepo. As soil moisture content increased from 7.4% to 29.9% (by weight), rates of contaminant accumulation by plant roots were increased by more than a factor of 2. Higher planting density also led to higher uptake, as the root bioconcentration factor (BCF, dry-weight ratio of contaminant concentration in the tissue to that in the soil) increased by 15-fold as the number of plants per pot was raised from 1 to 3. Concentrations of the compound in plant roots were inversely related to plant age, with root BCF declining by approximately a factor of 3 as plants aged from 14 to 28 d. Finally, no change in the bioavailability of the compound was observed in successive generations of plants grown in the same contaminated soil. The results suggest that phytoremediation is influenced by a number of factors and that the cleanup of contaminated soil can be enhanced by an understanding of environmental and other conditions affecting plant growth and bioconcentration.
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