Nine different clones of six species of Salix (Salix
cordata Muhlenb. non Michaux, S. fragilis L.,
S. caprea L.,
S. cinerea L., S. burjatica Nazarov. and S. viminalis
L.) and one hybrid (S.×calodendron Wimm.) were
exposed
to heavy metals in solution culture in an attempt to increase
innate metal resistance. Resistance was estimated
using comparative root measurements, and metal uptake was also studied.
The first experiment entailed pretreatments with background nutrient
solution, or 0·25 and 0·50 mg Cu l−1
amendments, and re-exposure
to each of the same concentrations. In a second experiment clones
were exposed to sub-toxic concentrations
of single metals (0·15 mg Cu l−1, 0·15 mg
Cd l−1
or 2·5 mg Zn l−1) and dual-combination treatments
(0·075 mg Cu l−1+0·075 mg Cd l−1,
0·075 mg Cu l−1+1·25 mg Zn l−1
or 0·075 mg Cd l−1+1·25 mg Zn
l−1)1 with
concentrations gradually raised 10-fold over 128 d. Plants tested in the
first experiment, following pre-exposure
to Cu, were no more resistant to subsequent exposure to this metal. In
the
second experiment, gradual cumulative
doses resulted in reduced phytotoxicity and increased resistance, most
notably
to Cd. There appeared to be an
inverse relationship between metal uptake and resistance. Copper uptake
was
restricted to the roots, whereas Cd
and Zn were more evenly distributed throughout the plant. Exposure to
dual combinations of metals resulted in
several interaction effects on uptake: increased root-bound Cu in all
combinations, and the increase in uptake of
both Cd and Zn into the root tissues when supplied with Cu. The implications
of these results for the use of
willows in phytoremediation programmes are discussed.