Differential Accumulation of Zinc in Selected Plant Functional Types in a Tropical Urban Coastal Wetland: Histochemical Detection and Allocation in Tissues
Zinc (Zn) is an essential microelement of biological processes in plants, such as hormone and protein synthesis, enzyme activation, and carbohydrate metabolism. However, this heavy metal is toxic when soil concentrations exceed 100 mg kg-1. Zn toxicity causes leaf chlorosis, inhibition of root elongation, and reduced metabolic activity. Plants in high Zn-concentration environments have developed diverse mechanisms to sequester excess Zn in organ-specific tissues, such as cell wall immobilization
