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Crops --- Vegetables --- Urban agriculture --- Soils --- Soil pollution --- Effect of heavy metals on --- Contamination --- Heavy metal content
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Spruce --- Spruce --- Soils --- Plant-soil relationships --- Composition. --- Effect of heavy metals on --- Heavy metal content
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Plants --- Phytoremediation. --- Effect of heavy metals on. --- Effect of stress on.
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La quatrième de couverture indique : "Les plantes hyperaccumulatrices de métaux lourds (zinc, cuivre, plomb, chrome, sélénium, arsenic, mercure, cadmium, nickel, argent, or, et platine) sont capables de les absorber et de décontaminer les eaux et les sols pollués. Près de mille plantes hyperaccumulatrices ou tolérant les métaux lourds ont été identifiées et chacune d'elles a sa spécialité. Cet ouvrage aborde plusieurs questions importantes. Quelles sont les origines de la pollution aux métaux lourds ? Comment les plantes réagissent-elles à la présence de ces métaux ? Pour la plante quels sont les avantages d'accumuler les métaux lourds (compétition avec d'autres plantes, protection contre les parasites et pathogènes) ? Quelles sont les qualités essentielles requises pour qu'une plante devienne de façon rentable accumulatrice de métaux lourds (potentiel d'accumulation, biomasse, système racinaire) ? Comment améliorer ces plantes par transgénèse ? Quelle est l'utilité de l'application d'engrais et d'agents chélateurs ? Quelques exemples pratiques de phytominage du nickel, de l'or et de l'argent ainsi que la phytoremèdiation (rhizofiltration, phytostabilisation, phytoextraction, phytovolatilisation) de sites pollués (sol et eau) au nickel, arsenic, cadmium, cuivre, mercure, plomb, sélénium, zinc sont présentés. Plus de quatre-vingts espèces de plantes tolérantes ou hyperaccumulatrices de métaux lourds sont citées dont seize d'entre elles sont illustrées dans cet ouvrage (aquarelles de l'un des auteurs)."
Plants --- Water --- Soil pollution --- Plantes --- Eau --- Sols --- Effect of heavy metals on --- Pollution --- Effets des éléments traces métalliques sur --- Pollution. --- Pollution de l'eau --- Effect of heavy metals on. --- Effets des métaux lourds --- Effets des métaux lourds
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Plants have a very specific and efficient mechanism to obtain, translocate and store nutrients from the surrounding environment. The precise mechanism that helps a plant in nutrient translocation from root to shoot also, in the same way, transfers and stores toxic metals within their structure. Metal toxicity generally causes multiple direct or indirect effects on plants, affecting nearly all of their physiological functions. Plant tolerance to heavy metals depends largely on plant efficiency in uptake, translocation and sequestration of heavy metals in specific cell organelles or specialized
Phytoremediation. --- Plants --- Heavy metals --- Plants, Effect of heavy metals on --- Heavy-metal tolerant plants --- Vegetation-based remediation --- Vegetative bioremediation --- Bioremediation --- Effect of heavy metals on. --- Environmental aspects. --- Physiological effect --- Effect of metals on
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Medicinal plants --- Congresses --- Aromatic plants --- Spices --- Plants [Effect of heavy metals on ] --- Pesticide residues in food --- Plants [Effect of poisons on ]
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Fishes --- Heavy metals --- Poissons --- Métaux lourds --- Diseases --- Physiology --- Physiological effect --- Toxicology --- Maladies --- Physiologie --- Effets physiologiques --- Fish diseases --- Fish kills --- Effect of heavy metals on --- Diseases and pests
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Hazardous wastes. --- Heavy metals --- Hazardous waste sites --- Water --- Fishes --- Mercury wastes --- Mercury --- Environmental chemistry. --- Physiological effect. --- Environmental aspects. --- Pollution --- Effect of heavy metals on. --- Toxicology.
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Homeostasis and Toxicology of Non-Essential Metals synthesizes the explosion of new information on the molecular, cellular, and organismal handling of metals in fish in the past 15 years. These elements are no longer viewed by fish physiologists as ""heavy metals"" that kill fish by suffocation, but rather as interesting moieties that enter and leave fish by specific pathways, which are subject to physiological regulation. The metals featured in this volume are those about which there has been most public and scientific concern, and therefore are those most widely studied by fish res
Agrotechnology and Food Sciences. Toxicology --- Fishes --- Metals, Heavy. --- Zoology and Animal Sciences. Zoology --- Toxicology (General). --- Effect of heavy metals on. --- Physiology. --- Animal Physiology and Biochemistry. --- 597 --- 615.916 --- 597 Pisces. Fishes. Ichthyology --- Pisces. Fishes. Ichthyology --- 615.916 Inorganic poisons --- Inorganic poisons --- Effect of heavy metals on --- Physiology --- Metals --- Metals as antiseptics --- Effect of metals on. --- Physiological effect.
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