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Evgeny Aleksandrovich Gladkov, Ilina Igorevna Tashlieva, Yuliya Ivanovna Dolgikh & Olga Victorovna Gladkova

Increasing the tolerance to copper of ornamental plants and lawn grasses in urban ecosystems

(Volume 90 - Année 2021 — Articles)
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Abstract

The plants are an important part of the urban ecosystem. Plants help to reduce the level of pollution and the effect of adverse environmental factors on urban ecosystems. Among the most dangerous pollutants for plants are copper ions. Copper is one of the main pollutants of urban soil. Copper ions significantly reduce the quality of ornamental plants. One approach to solve this problem is to create plants resistant to adverse environmental factors using cell selection. This method is hardly ever used in urban greening. The aim of the work is to produce plants resistant to copper ions. It was developed technologies to obtain ornamental plants resistant to copper. These plants have substantially increased their resistance to copper. Plants Festuca rubra were resistant to high levels of copper contamination and can grow on the basis of the level of pollution along roads, in residential areas. Plants Brachycome iberidifolia proved to be resistant to the average level of pollution of copper and can grow in parks and squares.

Keywords : urban greening, ornamental plants, urban ecosystem, copper, Brachycome iberidifolia, Festuca rubra

received on March 4, 2021 and accepted on June 25, 2021

1. Introduction

1The plants are an important part of the urban ecosystem. Urban greening contributes notably to quality of life and ecosystem services in cities [1]. Plants help to reduce the level of pollution and the effect of adverse environmental factors on urban ecosystems. Condition and quality of the lawn grass and flowering plants are important indicators of the level of landscaping and the urban environment. Purpose and environmental conditions determine the choice of plants for the lawn. Festuca rubra L. forms lawn of the highest quality. The structure of meadow grasses flowering plants include for example, Brachycome iberidifolia Benth., Linum grandiflorum L., Chrysanthemum carinatum L. etc.. Brachycome iberidifolia is a spectacular ornamental plant and is used for decoration of the flower beds. Unfortunately the previously plants, like the majority of other ornamental plants are very sensitive to pollution of urban soil. Among the most dangerous pollutants for plants is ions copper. Copper has the highest phytotoxicity among the common heavy metals [2].

2The standard copper content is 17 mg/l in the world's soils [3]. The background content of copper in the soils of the Moscow region is 15 mg/l. Copper is one of the main pollutants of urban soil [4-8]. In some areas in Moscow there is an excess of approximate permissible concentration, which is 132 mg/kg Cu. The average copper contents in Moscow was 33.5 mg/kg [9]. Total Cu concentrations were elevated 5–27 times in the urban soils of Copenhagen compared to an agricultural reference soil [10].

3Soil Cu contents increased in the following order: non-urban < green-urban < peri-urban < urban soils [11]. Traffic is believed to be one of the main sources of Cu in urban soil [11,12]. Cu accumulation in urban soils, resulting from urbanization, may generally influence denitrification in urban ecosystems [13]. Copper ions significantly reduce the quality of ornamental plants. Copper ions have strong influence on development and growth of plants [14]. Thus the copper limits the use of many ornamental plants. Damaged landscape can be restored with the help of biotechnology. One approach to solve this problem is to create plants resistant to adverse environmental factors using cell selection [15,16]. This method is rarely used in urban landscaping. To use cell selection, it is necessary to introduce plants into a cell culture, for some ornamental plant species this technology is very laborious [7,8,17,18]. The aim of the work is to produce ornamental plants resistant to copper ions.

2. Materials and methods

4Festuca rubra L. is perennial bunchgrass. It is found in many natural green areas on nearly all types of soils. Red fescue can grow between 2 to 20 cm tall. It thrives under a wide range of conditions and is resistant to dry poor soil, frost and drought.

5Brachycome iberidifolia Benth. is an annual herb, Asteraceae. The leaves of Brachyscome iberidifolia are fully divided, each having long and narrow segments from the midrib. The ray florets are varied in color, white through pink and blue to violet. Brachycome iberidifolia is used for decoration of the meadow grasses, flower beds, curbs, rocky hills.

Image 10000000000001880000017EEAF75BB80C14439E.jpg

Figure 1: Brachycome iberidifolia

6For getting callus we used seeds. Seeds were sterilized by soaking for 1 min. with 70% ethanol, then agitated in 2.6% sodium hypochlorite, followed by three times rinses in sterile water. The cultures incubated at 26ºC were exposed to a 16-h photoperiod. Sterile seeds were placed in Petri dishes in the light and humidity 70%.

7Surface-sterilized explants of Festuca rubra were inoculated on to Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with 3 mg/l 2,4-diclorophenoxiacetic acid (2,4-D), 3% sucrose, 0.05% mg/l caseinhydrolysat, 0.7 % agar-agar. Then callus were transferred to MS medium containing 1 mg/l 2,4-D. Regenerated shoots were cultured on MS medium without hormones, for root induction was used MS medium supplement with 2 mg/l naphthalenacetic acid (NAA).

8For induction callus of Brachycome iberidifolia was used Gambourg medium supplement with 3 % sucrose, with 2 mg/l 2,4-D and 2 mg/l kinetin. Then embryo callus were transferred to ½MS medium supplement with 1.5 % sucrose, 2 mg/l 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP) and 0.1 mg/l NAA. Studies have shown that the concentration of 2 mg/l BAP increased the level of formation of regenerants then the previously used concentration of 1 mg/l BAP. For root induction was used ½MS medium supplement with 0.1 mg/l NAA [17,19].

9To select tolerant plants of Festuca rubra and Brachycome iberidifolia was work out the methods selection. Callus of Festuca rubra were cultured on MS medium with addition 150 mg/l CuSO4.5H2O. After culturing for 1 month, increase in size, light callus were collected. Then callus are transplanted on regeneration and rooting medium supplemented with copper at a concentration of 150 mg/l.

10Selection scheme of Brachycome iberidifolia consisted of culturing the callus on Gambourg medium with 20 mg/l CuSO4.5H2O during 26 days and then induction shoot and root on the medium without copper.

11The standard deviation was calculated using Microsoft Office Excel 2003.

3. Results and discussion

12The copper concentration of 150 mg/l was chosen as selective concentration for tissue Festuca rubra. [19]. Scheme of selection Festuca rubra consist of culturing a callus for 1-2 subcultured on modified MS medium supplemented with 150 mg/l of copper, regeneration on MS medium supplemented with 150 mg/l of copper and rooting of plants on MS medium with 150 mg/l of copper. All received 10 regenerated plants (Table 1). Most obtained regenerants possessed increased resistance to 150 mg/kg of copper.

13Table 1. Selection of tolerance Festuca rubra to copper ions

Total number of callus

Number of resistant clones

Number of regenerants in vitro

Number of regenerated in the soil

750

184

32

10

14Callus of Brachycome iberidifolia were much more sensitive to copper than tissue of Festuca rubra. It was previously shown that callus of Brachycome iberidifolia were tolerant to 10 mg/l of copper [17], but at the concentration of 30 mg/l copper toxic effect was increased (Figure 2).

Image 1000020100000260000001CA9852836239B4487D.png

Figure 2 : Effect of copper on the survival of calli of Brachycome iberidifolia in 1 passage

15Therefore, it was necessary to modify the approach for obtaining plants resistant to copper. For resistant plant Brachycome iberidifolia was chosen the scheme selection without toxicant during regeneration and rooting stages. The cell selection scheme: callus was transferred on Gambourg medium supplement with 2 mg/l 2,4-D and 2 mg/l kinetin and 20 mg/l Cu and cultivated with subculturing for 26 days, regeneration with 3-4 times subculturing on ½ MS medium and supplemented with 2 mg/l BAP and 0.1 mg/l NAA, rooting on ½ MS medium with 0.1 mg/l NAA without toxicant.

16As a result of the selection were received plants of Brachycome iberidifolia.

Image 100002010000018B0000027315359EA8BFFF34CC.png

Figure 3 : Brachycome iberidifolia regenerants after cell selection

17Most obtained regenerants possessed increased resistance to 20 mg/l of copper. All regenerants remained viable, in contrast to the controls plant. At a concentration of 20 mg/l after 30 days resistant clones have 100% survival of shoots and the control plants survive 43%.

Image 10000201000001140000021F2A96650E971A7E05.png

Figure 4 : Brachycome iberidifolia regenerants after cell selection

18All regenerants retained high decorative qualities in the soil under control conditions. Some regenerants bloomed at copper concentrations 20 and 30 mg/kg (Figure 4). No flowering was observed in the original plants. Most obtained regenerants possessed increased resistance to 20 and 30 mg/kg of copper.

4. Conclusions

19Thus, we developed technologies to obtain plants resistant to copper. Work on obtaining ornamental plants that are resistant to copper is rare. Only plants of Chrysanthemum carinatum and Agrostis stolonifera obtained [18]. For obtaining resistant plants Festuca rubra were used the mediums supplemented with copper sulfate in each step, including the regeneration and rooting. For obtaining resistant plants Brachycome iberidifolia was used the medium supplemented with copper sulfate only at the stage of cultivation callus.

20These plants have substantially increased their resistance to copper. Plants Festuca rubra were resistant to high levels of copper contamination and can grow on the basis of the level of pollution along roads, in residential areas. Brachycome iberidifolia proved to be resistant to the average level of pollution of copper and can grow in parks and squares.

5. Comment

21Part of the work was done at the Department of ecological and industrial biotechnology, Moscow State University of Mechanical Engineering (earlier - Moscow State University of Environmental Engineering), which is currently reorganized.

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[16] Gladkov, E.A., Dolgikh, Yu.I., Gladkova, O.V. (2014) In vitro selection for tolerance to soil chloride salinization in perennial grasses. Sel’skokhozyaistvennaya Biologiya (Agricultural Biology), n°4, 106-111.

[17] Gladkov, E.A., Tashlieva, I.I., Dolgikh, Y.I., Gladkova O.V. (2019) Increasing Tolerance Agrostis Stolonifera, Festuca Rubra, Brachycome Iberidifolia, Chrysanthemum Carinatum to Copper. In: Cárdenas R., Mochalov V., Parra O., Martin O. (eds) Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on BioGeoSciences, BG 2017. Springer, Cham, 167-174. DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04233-2_15

[18] Gladkov, E.A., Tashlieva, I.I., Gladkova, O.V.(2020) Ornamental plants adapted to urban ecosystem pollution: lawn grasses and painted daisy tolerating copper. Environmental Science and Pollution Research. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-020-11423-6 .

[19] Litvinova, I.I., Gladkov, E.A., Dolgikh, Y.I., Gladkova O.V. (2016). Increased resistance Brachycome Iberidifolia and Festuca Rubra to soil copper ions. Izvestia of Samara scientific center of the Russian academy of sciences,18(5),160-162.

To cite this article

Evgeny Aleksandrovich Gladkov, Ilina Igorevna Tashlieva, Yuliya Ivanovna Dolgikh & Olga Victorovna Gladkova, «Increasing the tolerance to copper of ornamental plants and lawn grasses in urban ecosystems», Bulletin de la Société Royale des Sciences de Liège [En ligne], Volume 90 - Année 2021, Articles, 181-188 URL : https://popups.uliege.be/0037-9565/index.php?id=10431.

About: Evgeny Aleksandrovich Gladkov

K.А. Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology RAS, IPP RAS, 35 Botanicheskaya St., Moscow, 127276 Russia - corresponding author, E-mail: gladkovu@mail.ru

About: Ilina Igorevna Tashlieva

K.А. Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology RAS, IPP RAS, 35 Botanicheskaya St., Moscow, 127276 Russia

About: Yuliya Ivanovna Dolgikh

K.А. Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology RAS, IPP RAS, 35 Botanicheskaya St., Moscow, 127276 Russia

About: Olga Victorovna Gladkova

Independent scientist, Moscow, Prospekt Mira, 181, Russia