Trichloroacetic acid cycling in Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) saplings and the effects on tree health following long term exposure.
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Date
2004Author
Dickey, Catherine A
Heal, Kate V
Stidson, R T
Koren, R
Cape, Neil
Schröder, V
Heal, Mathew R
Metadata
Abstract
Trichloroacetic acid (TCA, CCl3COOH) has been associated with forest damage but
the source of TCA to trees is poorly characterised. To investigate the routes and
effects of TCA uptake in conifers, 120 Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr)
saplings were exposed to control, 10 or 100 μg l−1 solutions of TCA applied twice
weekly to foliage only or soil only over two consecutive 5-month growing seasons. At
the end of each growing season similar elevated TCA concentrations (approximate
range 200–300 ng g−1 dwt) were detected in both foliage and soil-dosed saplings
exposed to 100 μg l−1 TCA solutions showing that TCA uptake can occur from both
exposure routes. Higher TCA concentrations in branchwood of foliage-dosed saplings
suggest that atmospheric TCA in solution is taken up indirectly into conifer needles
via branch and stemwood. TCA concentrations in needles declined slowly by only
25–30% over 6 months of winter without dosing. No effect of TCA exposure on
sapling growth was measured during the experiment. However at the end of the first
growing season needles of saplings exposed to 10 or 100 μg l−1 foliage-applied TCA
showed significantly more visible damage, higher activities of some detoxifying
enzymes, lower protein contents and poorer water control than needles of saplings
dosed with the same TCA concentrations to the soil. At the end of each growing
season the combined TCA storage in needles, stemwood, branchwood and soil of each
sapling was <6% of TCA applied. Even with an estimated half-life of tens of days for
within-sapling elimination of TCA during the growing season, this indicates that TCA
is eliminated rapidly before uptake or accumulates in another compartment. Although
TCA stored in sapling needles accounted for only a small proportion of TCA stored in
the sapling/soil system it appears to significantly affect some measures of sapling
health.