UPLB scientists discover 'metal-eating' plant
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Scientists from the University of the Philippines-Los Baños (UPLB) have discovered a plant in Zambales that “eats” nickel. Named Rinorea niccolifera (“niccolum” – Neo Latin for nickel; “fer” – to yield, to contain), this shrub “hyperaccumulates” nickel in its leaves, with concentrations reaching more than 18,000 micrograms of nickel per gram of dried plant material. This is more than a hundred to a thousand times higher than what’s found in most other plants.

The ability to hyperaccumulate nickel and store it in shoot tissues without getting poisoned is rare among plants. Worldwide, only around 450 species are known to have this ability – just 0.15% of the estimated 300,000 species of vascular plants.

R. niccolifera was found at elevations of 320 to 825 meters in the Zambales Ophiolite Complex, an area known to contain several metallic mineral deposits. R. niccolifera was also classified as Endangered according to IUCN protocols because of its severely fragmented habitat and limited area of occupancy (so far, it was only found within an area of <500 km2). Much of its habitat is also located within an open pit mining concession.

The study was co-authored by Dr. Edwino S. Fernando (BS Forestry 1975, MS Forestry 1980) and Dr. Marilyn O. Quimado (BS Botany 1984, MS Botany 1991, PhD Botany 2002) from the UPLB College of Forestry and Natural Resources and Dr. Augustine Doronila from the University of Melbourne School of Chemistry.

To read the full feature article from GMA News Online, please click here.

Photo credits: Brooks Hays of UPI