Publication | Closed Access
The Predominance of Inorganic Arsenic Species in Plants from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada
176
Citations
15
References
1999
Year
EngineeringBotanyInorganic Arsenic SpeciesSame Plant SpeciesEnvironmental ChemistryMetalloid ContaminationBioremediationToxicologyBiogeochemistryTrace MetalArsenic SpeciesWater QualityEcotoxicologyPhytotoxicityNorthwest TerritoriesBiologyNatural SciencesPhytoremediationMetal ToxicityEnvironmental Toxicology
Elevated levels of arsenic in Yellowknife, NWT, Canada, from historic and recent gold mine operations, are of increasing concern to Yellowknife residents. The study of arsenic in Yellowknife plants is a part of ongoing bioavailability and food chain research. A variety of plants from Yellowknife were analyzed for total arsenic and water soluble arsenic species. The plants included vascular plants and bryophytes (mosses). Total amounts of arsenic were greatest in mosses and varied greatly within specimens of the same plant species from different locations. Mostly inorganic arsenic species were extracted from plants using methanol/water (1:1). This result is very important from a toxicological point of view, since inorganic species are relatively toxic arsenic species. Small amounts of methylated arsenic species, as well as arsenosugars, were present in some plants. On average, greater than 50% of arsenic in these plants was not extracted; the chemical and toxicological characteristics of this fraction remain a topic for further study.
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