Vicenta de la Fuente
Autonomous University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by Vicenta de la Fuente.
Arid Land Research and Management | 2007
Nuria Rodríguez; Ricardo Amils; Raimundo Jiménez-Ballesta; Lourdes Rufo; Vicenta de la Fuente
The Tinto River (Huelva, Spain) constitutes a complex and singular system characterized by extreme acidity and high concentrations of iron and other metals (Cu, Co, Mn, Zn, Pb, As) of its soils and waters. Traditional mining activity and the resulting intensive deforestation have eliminated its natural vegetation. Communities of the endemic Erica andevalensis colonize the fluvial terraces of the mining areas of the Tinto River, from drier to more humid soils, reaching its optimum in the proximity of rivers and streams. Concentrations of 22 (S, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Pb, Sr, Cr, Na, Mg, Al, Sc, Ti, Rb, Cd, Ba, Hg) elements have been determined for soils and E. andevalensis specimens at several points near the origin of the river. Erica andevalensis shows a remarkable capacity to survive with meager quantities of nutrients and an extraordinary tolerance to high concentrations of heavy metals. However, this heath does not show a lack of nutrients (Ca: 2012–5942 ppm; K: 223–3771 ppm; Mg: 883–2566 ppm) nor an excess of metals in its tissues (Fe: 73–514 ppm; Cu: 9–16 ppm; Co: ND–2 ppm). These abilities make E. andevalensis an ideal candidate for revegetation of mining areas and phytostabilization of heavy metal contaminated soils. These characteristics together with the exclusive extreme habitat on which E. andevalensis grows, make it possible to classify it as a metal bioindicator, e.g., for Cu.
Biological Trace Element Research | 2010
Vicenta de la Fuente; Lourdes Rufo; Nuria Rodríguez; Ricardo Amils; Javier Zuluaga
Río Tinto (Huelva, Spain) is located in one of the most important mining regions in the world. Its soils are characterized by their extreme acidity and elevated concentrations of heavy metals. Due to these characteristics, the Tinto ecosystem is considered unique and an ideal location to study biological adaptations to this type of habitat. Plant species that present these adaptations might be useful to mining and other metal pollution restoration programs. This study reports the results for the screening of Ca, Mg, Na, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, and Pb in aerial tissues of 97 plant species from the Tinto basin flora. In addition, plant–soil relationships were analyzed using the biological absorption coefficient (BAC) to detect the main plant adaptations in the Tinto flora. The species selected are representative of the biomass of the main dominant edaphophile and climatophile vegetation communities of the three river sections, forest, and subseral stages. Plant and soil elemental analyses were performed using inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry technique (ICP-MS). The results indicate that in general, Tinto flora shows a pattern of accumulation of the analyzed elements in aerial tissues which agrees with the nutritional requirements of vascular plants (macronutrients > micronutrients > indifferent or toxic elements). Among macronutrients, Ca seems to be an essential element in this habitat. This element accumulates in the aerial plant tissues. Basically, the Río Tinto flora is made of Fe, Cu, Zn, Ni, As, and Pb excluders, although some analyzed species of Erica, Quercus, Lavandula, Cistus, Genista, and Cytisus genera can be considered Mn accumulators. The results of this study make up a body of fundamental knowledge of the strategies used by plants to thrive in habitats with high concentrations of toxic heavy metals. This information is vital when it comes to planning a restoration program. Plants must be selected and used according to the requirements, always respecting the characteristics of the territory and facilitating the development of suitable vegetation.
Biological Trace Element Research | 2011
Javier Zuluaga; Nuria Rodríguez; Inmaculada Rivas-Ramirez; Vicenta de la Fuente; Lourdes Rufo; Ricardo Amils
A semiquantitative ICP-MS method suitable for evaluating metal content in plants exposed to high metal concentrations is described. The methodology which has been tested using different plant reference material is able, in only a few minutes, to obtain qualitative and quantitative information from the sample. Recoveries close to 100% were obtained for more than half of the referenced elements with an RSD <10%, thus avoiding the generation of a calibration line for each of the elements to be analyzed. The use of multi-standards improves the results obtained with conventional standards by a factor of two. In these conditions the semiquantitative multi-elemental analysis is a valid alternative for most of the analyzed elements with the exception of Si, Al, and P which requires the use of a quantitative ICP-MS analysis for its determination. Two different digestion protocols were tested, with and without the addition of HF to the HNO3 + H2O2 extraction mixture. Similar results were obtained for poplar and bush reference materials using the HNO3 + H2O2 mixture. The addition of HF did not improve the recovery of different elements, in general, but is critical for the quantitative measurements of Al and Si as its presence allows results to be obtained with an RDS <5%.
Plant and Soil | 2007
Rosalina Berazaín; Vicenta de la Fuente; Lourdes Rufo; Nuria Rodríguez; Ricardo Amils; Blanca Díez-Garretas; Daniel Sánchez-Mata; Alfredo Asensi
Pantropical species of the genera Phyllanthus and Euphorbia and the Cuban endemic genus Leucocroton from the Euphorbiaceae family, were selected for nickel localization microanalysis. Scanning Electron Microscopy coupled with Energy Dispersive X-ray Microanalysis (SEM-EDX) was used for qualitative detection of nickel in the selected Ni-hyperaccumulator species: Euphorbia helenae, Leucocroton linearifolius, L. flavicans Phyllanthus orbicularis, P. discolor and P. xpallidus, all collected from Cuban ultramafic soils. The leaves and stems from the Euphorbiaceae species analyzed were the organs with higher nickel accumulation. Elemental mapping of leaves and stem tissues from these species have been compared. The highest Ni concentrations were found in the laticifer tubes of stems and the epidermis tissues of leaves in all the analyzed species, suggesting a general pattern of the Euphorbiaceae family for nickel accumulation. The high nickel concentrations and its rather homogeneous distribution found in leaves of these Ni-hyperaccumulating plants suggest a possible role in protection mechanisms against environmental stress, such as UV irradiation.
Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2010
Emma Ortúñez; Vicenta de la Fuente
Micromorphological features of the leaf-blade, lemma, and palea were examined under scanning electron microscopy (SEM) for 64 species of the genus Festuca L. occurring in the Iberian Peninsula. The objective of the study was to survey these characters for the first time in the whole of the genus Festuca in this region, to assess their taxonomic value, and to compare the variation with recent DNA sequence-based phylogenies. The principal features include the frequency, shape, and distribution of silica bodies, short cells, crown cells, and prickles, and the morphology of long cells. The abaxial lemma surface shows the most important taxonomical and phylogenetic characters. The variation observed was consistent with the subgenera and sections identified in molecular studies.
Folia Geobotanica | 2001
Vicenta de la Fuente; Emma Ortúñez
A taxonomical revision of the genusFestuca sect.Eskia in the Iberian Peninsula is presented. Seven species and two hybrid taxa are recognized in this section in the area studied. Karyological data show that six of the studied taxa (F. pseudeskia, F. scariosa, F. elegans subsp.elegans, F. burnatii, F. eskia, andF. ×picoeuropeana) are diploids, two of them are both diploid and tetraploid (F. gautieri andF. quadriflora), one is tetraploid (F. elegans subsp.merinoi) and the ploidy level of one taxon (F. ×souliei) is unknown. A new combinationF. elegans subsp.merinoi (Pau)Fuente etOrtúñez is published. A key based on data collected in this study allows for the identification of all taxa in this section. The complete description of each taxon is presented, as well as the ecology and chorology, including distribution maps. The illustrations summarize plant habits and the morphological and anatomical pattern observed on spikelets, ligules and leaf cross sections. Epidermal features were studied using scanning electron microscopy.
Acta Histochemica | 2012
Vicenta de la Fuente; Nuria Rodríguez; Ricardo Amils
Ferritin is of interest at the structural and functional level not only as storage for iron, a critical element, but also as a means to prevent cell damage produced by oxidative stress. The main objective of this work was to confirm by immunocytochemistry the presence and the subcellular distribution of the ferritin detected by Mösbauer spectroscopy in Imperata cylindrica, a plant which accumulates large amounts of iron. The localization of ferritin was performed in epidermal, parenchymal and vascular tissues of shoots and leaves of I. cylindrica. The highest density of immunolabeling in shoots appeared in the intracellular space of cell tissues, near the cell walls and in the cytoplasm. In leaves, ferritin was detected in the proximity of the dense network of the middle lamella of cell walls, following a similar path to that observed in shoots. Immunolabeling was also localized in chloroplasts. The abundance of immunogold labelling in mitochondria for I. cylindrica was rather low, probably because the study dealt with tissues from old plants. These results further expand the localization of ferritin in cell components other than chloroplasts and mitochondria in plants.
Arid Land Research and Management | 2010
Lourdes Rufo; Vicenta de la Fuente
This study deals with plant communities of the mining area of the Río Tinto basin, their relationship with the environment, specifically their soils, and their successional processes. The vegetation was studied by phytosociological methods. The results reveal that current vegetation of the Río Tinto mining area is mainly composed of ten plant communities that present a progressive and regressive sequence that constitutes a vegetation series. The mining actions in the area have led to the loss of the original soils and to a fast regression of the vegetation to the first colonizer stages. This regressive process entails a loss of diversity and a change in the Raunkiers life-form spectrum. Soil physical and chemical analysis showed that the progressive processes of the vegetation involve an evolution of the soils, which tend to reduce their acidity and toxic metal concentration and to enrich in phyllosilicates. The results obtained give an overview of the potential vegetation that should exist in this territory. They allow the establishment of restoration programs in the mine tailored to the existing substrates and the native vegetation, favoring the conservation of both endemic species and plant communities in the region.
Biological Trace Element Research | 2013
Alejandro Franco; Lourdes Rufo; Javier Zuluaga; Vicenta de la Fuente
Nerium oleander L. (Apocynaceae) is a micro-nano phanerophyte that grows in the riverbanks of the Río Tinto basin (Southwest Iberian Peninsula). The waters and soils of the Río Tinto area are highly acidic and have high concentrations of heavy metals. In this environment, N. oleander naturally grows in both extreme acidic (EA) and less extreme acidic (LEA) water courses, excluding, and bioindicating certain metals. In this work, we compared and evaluated the accumulation preferences and capacities, the distribution and processes of biomineralization of metals (Fe, Cu, Zn, Mn, Mg, Ca) in the first stages of growth of EA and LEA oleanders by means of inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry, scanning electron microscopy, and energy dispersive X-ray analyzer analysis. Seeds from both environments were grown and treated with a self-made solution simulating the most extreme red waters from the Río Tinto. LEA plants drastically reduces the metal uptake at the beginning, but later reactivates the uptake reaching concentration values in the same range as the EA plants. The results showed high Mn, Zn and Mg concentrations, accumulation of Fe and Cu in plants from both environments, differing from the metal concentrations of field-grown oleanders. Iron bioformations with traces of other metals were present inside and over epidermal cells and inside vascular cells of stems and roots. They were absent of leaves. The accumulation properties of N. oleander in its early stages of development make it a species to take in consideration in phytoremediation processes but optimized conditions are needed to ensure enough biomass production.
Northeastern Naturalist | 2009
Blanca Díez-Garretas; Alfredo Asensi; Lourdes Rufo; Nuria Rodríguez; Daniel Sánchez-Mata; Ricardo Amils; Vicenta de la Fuente
Abstract The western Betic Mountain Range contains the largest ultramafic rock area in the Iberian Peninsula. The predominant flora of this southern territory (over two hundred taxa) was screened for Ni accumulation. Only two species showed important concentrations of Ni in their tissues, Alyssum serpyllifolium subsp. malacitanum (Brassicaceae), a Ni hyperaccumulator, and Saxifraga gemmulosa (Saxifragaceae). Saxifraga gemmulosa is a rare endemic species restricted to the ultramafic outcrops of Málaga (South Spain), mainly growing in basic or ultrabasic rock crevices, where it appears with other serpentinophytes such as Asplenium adiantum-nigrum subsp. corunnense (Aspleniaceae). Nickel and other representative elements present in Saxifraga gemmulosa and its soils from Sierra Bermeja (Málaga) were studied by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The structures of the plant were micromorphologically analysed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) coupled to an Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Probe (EDX). The results showed the Ni hyperaccumulating characteristics of S. gemmulosa. As observed in other Ni hyperaccumulator plants, accumulation was mainly detected in leaf epidermis.