One of the problems of using plants in environmental studies is finding current information. Because plants play a key role in environmental studies, from the greenhouse effect to environmental toxicological studies, information is widely scattered over many different fields and in many different sources. Plants for Environmental Studies solves that problem with a single, comprehensive source of information on the many ways plants are used in environmental studies.
    Written by experts from around the world and edited by a team of prominent environmental specialists, this book is the only source of complete information on environmental impacts, mutation, statistical analyses, relationships between plants and water, algae, plants in ecological risk assessment, compound accumulations, and more. Encompassing algae and vascular plants in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, this book contains a diverse collection of laboratory and in situ studies, methods, and procedures using plants to evaluate air, water, wastewater, sediment, and soil.

    The Effects of Ultra Violet-B Radiation on Higher Plants, B. Greenberg, M.I. Wilson, X.-D. Huang, C.L. Duxbury, K.E. Gerhardt, and R.W. Gensemer
    Radiation Effects on Plants, R.W. Holst and D.J. Nagel
    Plant-Water Interactions, J.L. Hatfield
    Plant Activation of Environmental Agents: The Utility of the Plant Cell/Microbe Coincubation Assay, M.J. Plewa, K.-Y. Seo, Y.-H. Ju, S.R. Smith, and E.D. Wagner
    Statistical Methods in Plant Environmental Studies, M. Ritter
    Water Quality and Aquatic Plants, M.A. Lewis and W. Wang
    Algal Indicators of Aquatic Ecosystem Conditions and Change, P.V. McCormick and J. Cairns
    Photosynthetic Electron Transport as a Bioassay, J. Gemel, B. Waters-Earhart, M.R. Ellersieck, A. Asfaw, G.F. Krause, V. Puri, and W.R. Lower
    Laboratory Bioassays with Microalgae, N. Nyholm and H.G. Peterson
    Aquatic Plant Communities for Impact Monitoring and Assessment, B.H. Hill
    Allium Test for Screening Chemicals; Evaluation of Cytological Parameters, G. Fiskesjö
    The Use of Vascular Plants as "Field" Biomonitors, R.L. Powell
    Metal Accumulation by Aquatic Macrophytes, W. Wang and M.A. Lewis
    Bioaccumulation of Xenobiotic Organic Chemicals by Terrestrial Plants, O.J. Schwartz and L.W. Jones
    Uptake of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by Vegetation: A Review of Experimental Methods, T.A. Anderson, A.M. Hoylman, N.T. Edwards, and B. Walton
    Plant Uptake and Metabolism Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs), R.K. Puri, Y. Qiuping, S. Kapila, W.R. Lower, and V. Puri
    Selection of Phytotoxicity Tests for Use in Ecological Risk Assessments, L.A. Kapustka
    Index

    Biography

    Wuncheng (Woodrow) Wang is a hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. Before 1991, he was a principal scientist with the Illinois State Water Survey in Peoria, IL. He has been chairing two Joint Task Groups (Lemna and marsh plants) of the Standard Methods Committee since 1987 and chaired the First ASTM Symposium on Use of Plants for Toxicity Assessment in 1989. His interest is the use of plants for water quality assessment. Joseph (Joe) W. Gorsuch is Director of Silver Issues with Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, NY. For the 22 years prior to April 1, 1996, he was Group Leader and Senior Environmental Toxicologist at Kodak. He chaired the ASTM E47.11 Subcommittee on Plant Toxicology from 1992 to 1995, chaired the Second ASTM Symposium on Use of Plants for Toxicity Assessment in 1990, and co-chaired the First ASTM Symposium in 1989. He is interested in using plants to evaluate sludge application practices. Jane S. Hughes is the founder and president of Carolina Ecotox, Inc., a contract environmental toxicology testing laboratory in Durham, NC. She has nearly 20 years of experience conducting and supervising aquatic toxicity testing with a variety of plants and animals to meet diverse regulatory requirements. Her specialty is aquatic plant toxicity testing, and she has chaired methods development activities relating to algae, duckweed, and aquatic macrophytes in ASTM’s Committee E-47 on Biological Effects and Environmental Fate. She also served as co-chair and chair for the First and Third ASTM Symposia on Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment.

    "A broad overview of the use of aquatic and terrestrial environment vascular plants and of algae in environmental studies is provided by this comprehensive, data-rich, advanced-level book."
    -Environmental Science & Technology
    "This book constitutes a rare, comprehensive source on using plants for environmental studies and monitoring... A benchmark work, useful for upper-division undergraduates through research scientists."
    -Choice
    "...well edited and supplied with a detailed index. I can recommend it as an excellent comprehensive source of information on the many ways how plants are used in environmental studies."-Photosynthetica