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Safety of food crops on land contaminated with trace elements
Authors:Singh Bal Ram  Gupta Satish K  Azaizeh Hassan  Shilev Stefan  Sudre Damien  Song Won Yong  Martinoia Enrico  Mench Michel
Affiliation:1. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB), PO Box 5003, N‐1432, ?s, Norway;2. Research Center Agroscope Reckenholz‐Tanikon ART, Reckenholzstrasse 1991, CH‐8046 Zürich, Switzerland;3. Institute of Applied Research (affiliated with University of Haifa), The Galilee Society, PO Box 437, Shefa Amr 20200, Israel;4. Department of Microbiology and Environmental Biotechnology, Agricultural University, Plovdiv, Bulgaria;5. Department of Plant Biology, University of Zürich, Zollikestrasse 107, CH‐8008 Zürich, Switzerland;6. UMR BIOGECO INRA 1202, University of Bordeaux 1, Bat. B8 RdC Est, Avenue des Facultés, F‐33405 Talence, France
Abstract:Contamination of agricultural soils with trace elements (TEs) through municipal and industrial wastes, atmospheric deposition and fertilisers is a matter of great global concern. Since TE accumulation in edible plant parts depends on soil characteristics, plant genotype and agricultural practices, those soil- and plant-specific options that restrict the entry of harmful TEs into the food chain to protect human and animal health are reviewed. Soil options such as in situ stabilisation of TEs in soils, changes in physicochemical parameters, fertiliser management, element interactions and agronomic practices reduce TE uptake by food crops. Furthermore, phytoremediation and solubilisation as alternative techniques to reduce TE concentrations in soils are also discussed. Among plant options, selection of species and cultivars, metabolic processes and microbial transformations in the rhizosphere can potentially affect TE uptake and distribution in plants. For this purpose, genetic variations are exploited to select cultivars with low uptake potential, especially low-cadmium accumulator wheat and rice cultivars. The microbial reduction of elements and transformations in the rhizosphere are other key players in the cycling of TEs that may offer the basis for a wide range of innovative biotechnological processes. It is thus concluded that appropriate combination of soil- and plant-specific options can minimise TE transfer to the food chain.
Keywords:cultivars  food safety  immobilisation  land contamination  metal transport  microbial transformation  molecular process  plant species  phytoremediation  rhizosphere  trace element
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