4.7 Article

Heavy metal contamination of soil and water in the vicinity of an abandoned e-waste recycling site: Implications for dissemination of heavy metals

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 506, Issue -, Pages 217-225

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.10.121

Keywords

Abandoned site; E-waste Ecological risk; Heavy metal; Soil; Water

Funding

  1. Guangzhou Municipal Colleges
  2. Universities Science and Technology Project [10A064]
  3. Open fund of Key Laboratory of Water Quality Safety and Protection in Pearl River Delta [GZ201102]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41203058, 41101456, 41301348]

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Illegal e-waste recycling activity has caused heavy metal pollution in many developing countries, including China. In recent years, the Chinese government has strengthened enforcement to impede such activity; however, the heavy metals remaining in the abandoned e-waste recycling site can still pose ecological risk. The present study aimed to investigate the concentrations of heavy metals in soil and water in the vicinity of an abandoned e-waste recycling site in Longtang, South China. Results showed that the surface soil of the former burning and acid-leaching sites was still heavily contaminated with Cd (>039 mg kg(-1)) and Cu (>1981 mg kg(-1)), which exceeded their respective guideline levels. The concentration of heavy metals generally decreased with depth in both burning site and paddy field, which is related to the elevated pH and reduced TOM along the depth gradient. The pond water was seriously acidified and contaminated with heavy metals, while the well water was slightly gontaminated since heavy metals were mostly retained in the surface soil. The use of pond water for irrigation resulted in considerable heavy metal contamination in the paddy soil. Compared with previous studies, the reduced heavy metal concentrations in the surface soil imply that heavy metals were transported to the other areas, such as pond. Therefore, immediate remediation of the contaminated soil and water is necessaty to prevent dissemination of heavy metals and potential ecological disaster. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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