Journal of Degraded and Mining Lands Management
Vol 1, No 1 (2013)

The potential use of indigenous nickel hyperaccumulators for small-scale mining in The Philippines

E S Fernando (Department of Forest Biological Sciences, College of Forestry and Natural Resources, The University of the Philippines – Los Baños College, 4031 Laguna, Philippines)
M O Quimado (Department of Forest Biological Sciences, College of Forestry and Natural Resources, The University of the Philippines – Los Baños College, 4031 Laguna, Philippines)
L C Trinidad (Central Analytical Services Laboratory,National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology,The University of the Philippines – Los Baños College)
A I Doronila (School of Chemistry, University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia)



Article Info

Publish Date
20 Oct 2013

Abstract

Uptake of nickel and three other heavy metals (copper, cobalt, and chromium) was examined in 33 species of the common and rare native vascular plants growing in an ultramafic area currently subjected to mining in Zambales Province, Luzon, Philippines. Leaf tissue samples were initially screened in the field using filter paper impregnated with dimethylglyoxime (1% solution in 70% ethyl alcohol) and later analyzed by atomic absorption spectroscopy. One species was found to be a hypernickelophore (>10,000 µg/g), eight species were nickel hyperaccumulators (>1,000 µg/g), nineteen species were hemi-accumulators (>100-1,000 µg/g), and five species were non-accumulators (<100 µg/g). This paper significantly adds to the list of hyperaccumulator species first reported for the Philippines in 1992. The findings will be discussed in context of using indigenous species for post mining ecological restoration and nickel phytoextraction in small-scale mining in the Philippines

Copyrights © 2013






Journal Info

Abbrev

jdmlm

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Biochemistry, Genetics & Molecular Biology

Description

Journal of Degraded and Mining Lands Management is managed by the International Research Centre for the Management of Degraded and Mining Lands (IRC-MEDMIND), research collaboration between Brawijaya University, Mataram University, Massey University, and Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of ...