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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
A biomonitoring study of air pollution was developed in an urban-industrial area (Seixal,
Portugal) using leaves of strawberry plants (Fragaria × ananassa Duchesne ex Rozier) as biomonitors
to identify the main sources and hotspots of air pollution in the study area. The distribution of
exposed strawberry plants in the area was based on a citizen science approach, where residents
were invited to have the plants exposed outside their homes. Samples were collected from a total
of 49 different locations, and their chemical composition was analyzed for 22 chemical elements
using X-ray Fluorescence spectrometry. Source apportionment tools, such as enrichment factors and
principal component analysis (PCA), were used to identify three different sources, one geogenic and
two anthropogenic (steel industry and traffic), besides plant major nutrients. The spatial distribution
of elemental concentrations allowed the identification of the main pollution hotspots in the study
area. The reliability of using strawberry leaves as biomonitors of air pollution was evaluated by
comparing them with the performance of transplanted lichens by regression analysis, and a significant
relation was found for Fe, Pb, Ti, and Zn, although with a different accumulation degree for the
two biomonitors. Furthermore, by applying PCA to the lichen results, the same pollution sources
were identified.
Description
Keywords
Strawberry leaves Air biomonitoring Particulate matter Metal accumulation Citizen science
Citation
Gamelas, C.A., Canha, N., Justino, A.R., Nunes, A., Nunes, S., Dionísio, I., Kertesz, Z. & Almeida, S.M.(2024). Strawberry plant as a biomonitor of trace metal air pollution: a citizen science approach in an urban-industrial area near Lisbon, Portugal. Plants, 13, 3587.