ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: The copper bioaccumulation by the floating Lemna minor and by the completely submerged Ranunculus tricophyllus as a function of exposure time and copper concentration was studied, with the aim of proposing these species as environmental biosensors of the water pollution. RESULTS: The results show that both these aquatic angiosperms are good indicators of copper pollution because the copper uptake is the only function of metal concentration (water pollution). CONCLUSION: Uptake behavior is reported as a function of the time and concentration, based on the results of a 3-year study. Kinetic evaluations are proposed.
Subject(s)
Copper/metabolism , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Ranunculus/metabolism , Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism , Copper/analysis , Water/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water QualityABSTRACT
The European Commission has adopted a large number of emergency measures to prevent the spread of the Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in the Member States, and among them, a European Regulation prohibits the feeding to ruminants of animal protein and animal feed containing such protein. Aim of this work has been to propose the thermal analysis as a new rapid and sensitive screening tool for a preliminary determination of possible contamination in products destined to bovine growth, since the possibility to screen the samples by a rapid and sensitive tool could reduce the time of analysis required by the actual methodology and could allow the systematic surveillance of bovine feeding, with the official EU methods applied only to positive samples.