The University of Toledo

Lake Erie Center
: ERRL: Current Projects

Skip to menu | Skip to content | Skip to search | Skip to global navigation
  • Home
  • About UT
  • Directions/Maps
  • Campus Directory
  • Contact
  • myUT
  • Advanced Search
  • Feedback
  • Prospective Students
  • Admission
  • Academics
  • Campus Life
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Research
  • Athletics
  • Alumni & Community
  • Print
Lake Erie Center
  • Arts & Sciences Home
  • About the College of A&S
  • Student Services
  • College Council
  • Centers & Institutes
  • Faculty & Staff Resources 
  • A&S Alumni
Welcome to the LEC
  • Lake Erie Center Home
  • Lake Erie Center Mission
  • NSF Gk-12 Program
  • Facilities
  • Education and Outreach 
  • Events
  • Staff & Faculty
  • Research
  • Links 
Research Labs & Areas
  • Benthic Ecology Lab
  • Great Lakes Genetics Lab
  • Water Quality Lab
  • Environmental Remediation Lab
  • GIS & Remote Sensing Lab
  • Invasive Species Modeling
  • Duck and Otter Creeks
ERRL
  • ERRL Home
  • Environmental Remediation and Restoration Experimental Park (ERREP)
  • Current Projects 
    Microbial Tracking in Maumee Bay  
    Alternative Landfill Cover Design
    Passive Treatment of Arsenic
    E.coli Transport in Fields
    Modeling Mesocosm Flows
  • Research Staff
  • Publications and Reports

ERRL: Current Projects

Uptake of Arsenic by plants of the Oak Openings Region


Jordan Rofkar
Ph.D Student

I am currently involved in a USDA-funded Phytoremediation project.  I am working with my major professor (Daryl F. Dwyer) and other members of ERRL, to identify indigenous Oak Openings plants that accumulate arsenic.  Arsenic is now the contaminant of greatest concern, according to the USEPA.  Lumber treatment, pesticide production, and glass manufacturing have all resulted in arsenic-contaminated brownfields in the U.S.   Contamination of drinking water in areas of southeast Asia have prompted the creation of the Grainger Challenge Prize – an international prize based on the design and implementation of passive, arsenic-treatment systems.  In other words, arsenic contamination is widespread.  I hope that our research will contribute information about the potential for inexpensive, passive treatment of arsenic-contaminated soil and water.


Methods for identifying plants that accumulate arsenic:

1. Screening plants in a controlled environment.

 

2. Screening plants in field lysimeters.

 

Page updated: June 28, 2007
Page top
  • Prospective Students
  • Admission
  • Academics
  • Campus Life
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Research
  • Athletics
  • Alumni & Community
The University of Toledo • 2801 W. Bancroft • Toledo, OH 43606-3390 • 1.800.586.5336
© 2006-2008 The University of Toledo. All rights reserved. • Send all feedback / comments to webmaster.
  • Terms of Use