Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water

Pollution by organic and inorganic toxic substances has raised public and environmental concern globally since decades ago. However, due to rapid growth of world population along with excessive industrial development, this situation worsens. One of the non-essential heavy metals, mercury (Hg), is a...

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Main Authors: A Majid, Noraishah, Phang, Ing Chia
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/5/45706-new.pdf
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recordtype eprints
spelling iium-457062016-09-27T03:07:47Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/ Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water A Majid, Noraishah Phang, Ing Chia Q Science (General) Pollution by organic and inorganic toxic substances has raised public and environmental concern globally since decades ago. However, due to rapid growth of world population along with excessive industrial development, this situation worsens. One of the non-essential heavy metals, mercury (Hg), is a widespread toxic pollutant commonly found in drinking water sources. Therefore, there is a need to monitor the level of Hg in the drinking water. Biomonitoring, which use biological response to assess environmental changes, is one of the approaches that are getting more attention recently. Plant bioindicator offers huge advantages over conventional water quality analysis. Other than cheap, easy to apply and give rapid results; most importantly, people in the rural area can apply this method to monitor water quality without the need of modern equipment and technical expertise. In this current study, young leaves from terrestrial plants were treated with water containing Hg solutions. Plant that showed visible morphological changes was selected as potential bioindicator and further analysed. Over 60 plants were screened including herbs, shrubs and flowering plants. At the 24th h of observation, 15 plants showed morphological changes with several obvious symptoms, including presence of dark spot, chlorosis, browning of leaves and wrinkle. Among these plants, Plectranthus amboinicus, Lantana camara and Pelargonium radula treated with Hg solutions exhibited morphological changes at the 6th h of treatment, compared to the control. In the present study, Pelargonium radula was chosen as the Hg bioindicator as it gave the fastest morphological changes, which is within 4 h of treatment. This new finding was promising, as it indicated that plants can be used for Hg biomonitoring for the safety consumption of drinking water. 2015 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/5/45706-new.pdf A Majid, Noraishah and Phang, Ing Chia (2015) Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water. In: International Conference on Advancement in Science and Technology (iCAST 2015) - ‘Frontiers in Biotechnology’, 10-12 August 2015, Pahang, Malaysia. (Unpublished) http://www.iium.edu.my/icast/
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
A Majid, Noraishah
Phang, Ing Chia
Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
description Pollution by organic and inorganic toxic substances has raised public and environmental concern globally since decades ago. However, due to rapid growth of world population along with excessive industrial development, this situation worsens. One of the non-essential heavy metals, mercury (Hg), is a widespread toxic pollutant commonly found in drinking water sources. Therefore, there is a need to monitor the level of Hg in the drinking water. Biomonitoring, which use biological response to assess environmental changes, is one of the approaches that are getting more attention recently. Plant bioindicator offers huge advantages over conventional water quality analysis. Other than cheap, easy to apply and give rapid results; most importantly, people in the rural area can apply this method to monitor water quality without the need of modern equipment and technical expertise. In this current study, young leaves from terrestrial plants were treated with water containing Hg solutions. Plant that showed visible morphological changes was selected as potential bioindicator and further analysed. Over 60 plants were screened including herbs, shrubs and flowering plants. At the 24th h of observation, 15 plants showed morphological changes with several obvious symptoms, including presence of dark spot, chlorosis, browning of leaves and wrinkle. Among these plants, Plectranthus amboinicus, Lantana camara and Pelargonium radula treated with Hg solutions exhibited morphological changes at the 6th h of treatment, compared to the control. In the present study, Pelargonium radula was chosen as the Hg bioindicator as it gave the fastest morphological changes, which is within 4 h of treatment. This new finding was promising, as it indicated that plants can be used for Hg biomonitoring for the safety consumption of drinking water.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author A Majid, Noraishah
Phang, Ing Chia
author_facet A Majid, Noraishah
Phang, Ing Chia
author_sort A Majid, Noraishah
title Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
title_short Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
title_full Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
title_fullStr Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
title_full_unstemmed Pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring Hg in drinking water
title_sort pelargonium radula as a plant bioindicator in monitoring hg in drinking water
publishDate 2015
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/45706/5/45706-new.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T21:05:02Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T21:05:02Z
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