posted on 2016-02-19, 00:24authored byMatt A. Limmer, Mikhil K. Shetty, Samantha Markus, Ryan Kroeker, Beth L. Parker, Camilo Martinez, Joel G. Burken
Tree sampling methods
have been used in phytoscreening applications
to delineate contaminated soil and groundwater, augmenting traditional
investigative methods that are time-consuming, resource-intensive,
invasive, and costly. In the past decade, contaminant concentrations
in tree tissues have been shown to reflect the extent and intensity
of subsurface contamination. This paper investigates a new phytoscreening
tool: directional tree coring, a concept originating from field data
that indicated azimuthal concentrations in tree trunks reflected the
concentration gradients in the groundwater around the tree.To experimentally test this hypothesis, large diameter trees were
subjected to subsurface contaminant concentration gradients in a greenhouse
study. These trees were then analyzed for azimuthal concentration
gradients in aboveground tree tissues, revealing contaminant centroids
located on the side of the tree nearest the most contaminated groundwater.
Tree coring at three field sites revealed sufficiently steep contaminant
gradients in trees reflected nearby groundwater contaminant gradients.
In practice, trees possessing steep contaminant gradients are indicators
of steep subsurface contaminant gradients, providing compass-like
information about the contaminant gradient, pointing investigators
toward higher concentration regions of the plume.