Chicory (
Cichorium intybus L.) and dandelion (
Taraxacum officinale Web.) were demonstrated to be potential indicator plants for heavy metal contaminated sites. Chicory, grown with 0.5–50

M cadmium (Cd) in nutrient solution, accumulated 10–300

M Cd g
–1 in shoots and 10–890

g Cd

g
–1 in roots and rhizomes. With dandelion, 20–410

g Cd

g
–1 was found in shoots and 20–1360

g Cd

g
–1 in roots and rhizomes. An inverse correlation existed between chlorophyll and Cd concentrations in shoots of both species. Accumulation of Cd from nutrient solution was similar with the counter-anions SO
4
2–, Cl
1– and NO
3
– in chicory. In chicory grown in Cd-amended (11.2 kg Cd ha
–1 applied five years previously) soils, Cd concentrations were substantially higher than in controls in all plant parts following the order: leaf > caudex > stem > root and rhizome. The above trend was the opposite of that observed in solution culture, where Cd accumulation was higher in roots and rhizomes than in shoots. Higher cadmium accumulation was found from a Cd-treated sand (Grossarenic Paleudult) than from a loamy sand (Typic Kandiudult) soil type. Chicory and dandelion are proposed indicator plants of cadmium contamination, and both have the potential to be an international standard heavy phytomonitor species of heavy metal contaminantion.
Key words Chicory - dandelion - cadmium contamination - chlorophyll - phytoindicator