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The impact of increased flooding occurrence on the mobility of potentially toxic elements in floodplain soil - A review

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 754, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142040

Keywords

Floodplain soil; Flooding; Climate change; Potentially toxic elements; Contamination; Mobility

Funding

  1. NERC SCENARIO PhD studentship
  2. British Geological Survey Universities Funding Initiative
  3. NERC [bgs06003] Funding Source: UKRI

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Flooding events are increasing the mobilization of potential toxic elements in floodplain soils. Five key processes interact to affect the mobility of these elements, making it difficult to predict the impact. Factors such as microbial mediation, temperature dependence, and soil mineralogy play a role in influencing the mobility of toxic elements in floodplain soils.
The frequency and duration of flooding events is increasing due to land-use changes increasing run-off of precipitation, and climate change causing more intense rainfall events. Floodplain soils situated downstream of urban or industrial catchments, which were traditionally considered a sink of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) arriving from the river reach, may now become a source of legacy pollution to the surrounding environment, if PTEs are mobilised by unprecedented flooding events. When a soil floods, the mobility of PTEs can increase or decrease due to the net effect of five key processes; (i) the soil redox potential decreases which can directly alter the speciation, and hence mobility, of redox sensitive PTEs (e.g. Cr, As), (ii) pH increases which usually decreases the mobility of metal cations (e.g. Cd2+, Cu2+, Ni2+, Pb2+, Zn2+), (iii) dissolved organic matter (DOM) increases, which chelates and mobilises PTEs, (iv) Fe and Mn hydroxides undergo reductive dissolution, releasing adsorbed and co-precipitated PTEs, and (v) sulphate is reduced and PTEs are immobilised due to precipitation of metal sulphides. These factors may be independent mechanisms, but they interact with one another to affect the mobility of PTEs, meaning the effect of flooding on PTE mobility is not easy to predict. Many of the processes involved in mobilising PTEs are microbially mediated, temperature dependent and the kinetics are poorly understood. Soil mineralogy and texture are properties that change spatially and will affect how the mobility of PTEs in a specific soil may be impacted by flooding. As a result, knowledge based on one river catchment may not be particularly useful for predicting the impacts of flooding at another site. This review provides a critical discussion of the mechanisms controlling the mobility of PTEs in floodplain soils. It summarises current understanding, identifies limitations to existing knowledge, and highlights requirements for further research. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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