Issue 7, 2004

Plants as indicators of urban air pollution (ozone and trace elements) in Pisa, Italy

Abstract

A biennial integrated survey, based on the use of vascular plants for the bioindication of the effects of tropospheric ozone, was performed in the area of Pisa (Tuscany, Central Italy). It also investigated the distribution of selected trace elements in plants and the data were compared with those obtained from the use of passive samplers, automatic analysers of ozone and lichen biodiversity. Photochemically produced ozone proved to be present during the warm season, with maximum hourly means surpassing 100 ppb: the use of supersensitive tobacco Bel-W3 confirmed the value of detailed, cost-effective, monitoring surveys. Trials with clover clones demonstrate that sensitive plants undergo severe biomass reduction in the current ozone regime. The mean NC-S (clover clone sensitive to ozone):NC-R (resistant) biomass ratio ranged from 0.7 (in 1999) to 0.5 (in 2000). The economic impact of these reductions deserves attention. The data obtained using passive ozone samplers exceeded those obtained using an automatic analyser. The mapping of epiphytic lichen biodiversity was not related to the geographical ozone distribution as can be seen from the tobacco's response. Lettuce plants grown under standardized conditions were used positively as bioaccumulators of trace elements: Pb was abundantly recovered, but a large portion of this element was removed by washing.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Dec 2003
Accepted
16 Apr 2004
First published
26 May 2004

J. Environ. Monit., 2004,6, 636-645

Plants as indicators of urban air pollution (ozone and trace elements) in Pisa, Italy

C. Nali, L. Crocicchi and G. Lorenzini, J. Environ. Monit., 2004, 6, 636 DOI: 10.1039/B316800J

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