Richardson J B, Görres J H, Jackson B P, Friedland A J
Environmental Studies Program, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755 USA ; Department of Earth Science, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755 USA.
Department of Plant & Soil Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
Soil Biol Biochem. 2015 Jun 1;85:190-198. doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.03.001.
Trace metals and metalloids (TMM) in forest soils and invasive earthworms were studied at 9 uncontaminated sites in northern New England, USA. Essential (Cu, Mo, Ni, Zn, Se) and toxic (As, Cd, Pb, Hg and U) TMM concentrations (mg kg) and pools (mg m) were quantified for organic horizons (forest floor), mineral soils and earthworm tissues. Essential TMM tissue concentrations were greatest for mineral soil-feeding earthworm . Toxic TMM tissue concentrations were highest for organic horizon-feeding earthworms , and . Most earthworm species had attained tissue concentrations of Pb, Hg and Se potentially hazardous to predators. Bioaccumulation factors were Cd > Se > Hg > Zn > Pb > U > 1.0 > Cu > As > Mo > Ni. Only Cd, Se Hg and Zn were considered strongly bioaccumulated by earthworms because their average bioaccumulation factors were significantly greater than 1.0. Differences in bioaccumulation did not appear to be caused by soil concentrations as earthworm TMM tissue concentrations were poorly correlated with TMM soil concentrations. Instead, TMM bioaccumulation appears to be species and site dependent. The invasive had the greatest tissue TMM pools, due to its large body mass and high abundance at our stands. We observed that TMM tissue pools in earthworms were comparable or exceeded organic horizon TMM pools; earthworm tissue pools of Cd were up 12 times greater than in the organic horizon. Thus, exotic earthworms may represent an unaccounted portion and flux of TMM in forests of the northeastern US. Our results highlight the importance of earthworms in TMM cycling in northern forests and warrant more research into their impact across the region.
在美国新英格兰北部的9个未受污染的地点,对森林土壤和入侵蚯蚓中的痕量金属和类金属(TMM)进行了研究。对有机层(森林地表)、矿质土壤和蚯蚓组织中的必需(铜、钼、镍、锌、硒)和有毒(砷、镉、铅、汞和铀)TMM浓度(毫克/千克)和储量(毫克/平方米)进行了量化。以矿质土壤为食的蚯蚓体内必需TMM组织浓度最高。以有机层为食的蚯蚓体内有毒TMM组织浓度最高。大多数蚯蚓物种体内铅、汞和硒的组织浓度对捕食者具有潜在危害。生物累积因子为镉>硒>汞>锌>铅>铀>1.0>铜>砷>钼>镍。只有镉、硒、汞和锌被认为被蚯蚓强烈生物累积,因为它们的平均生物累积因子显著大于1.0。生物累积的差异似乎不是由土壤浓度引起的,因为蚯蚓TMM组织浓度与TMM土壤浓度相关性很差。相反,TMM生物累积似乎取决于物种和地点。入侵蚯蚓由于其庞大的体型和在我们研究地点的高丰度,具有最大的组织TMM储量。我们观察到蚯蚓体内的TMM组织储量与有机层TMM储量相当或超过有机层;蚯蚓体内镉的组织储量比有机层高12倍。因此,外来蚯蚓可能代表了美国东北部森林中TMM未被考虑的部分和通量。我们的结果突出了蚯蚓在北方森林TMM循环中的重要性,并值得对其在整个地区的影响进行更多研究。