4.6 Article

Assessing the fractionation and bioavailability of heavy metals in soil-rice system and the associated health risk

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOCHEMISTRY AND HEALTH
Volume 44, Issue 2, Pages 301-318

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10653-021-00876-4

Keywords

Heavy metals; Geochemical speciation; Bioavailability; Health risk assessment; The Yangtze River Delta

Funding

  1. project of Monitoring Technology and Forewarning of Heavy Metal Pollution in Typical Agricultural Land of Jiangsu Province [KJXM2016039]
  2. project of Ecological and Geological Environment Monitoring of Land (Agricultural Land) in Jiangsu Province
  3. project of Comprehensive Geological Survey of Modern Demonstration Area in Southern Jiangsu
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41673095, 41907141]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [Swu 118203]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study developed a method to establish the relationship between chemical fractionation of heavy metals in soil and their accumulation in rice. The results showed that labile fractions had significant contributions to heavy metal accumulations in rice, and Cd and As were identified as the main pollutants in the soil.
This study developed a method to build relationships between chemical fractionations of heavy metals in soils and their accumulations in rice and estimate the respective contribution of each geochemical speciation in the soils from the Yangtze River Delta, China. In contaminated areas, residue and humic acid-bound fractions in soils were the main phases for most heavy metals. The mobility of heavy metals was in this following order: Cd > Pb approximate to Zn > Ni > A s approximate to Cr > Hg. Transfer factors calculated by the ratios of specific fractionations of heavy metals in the soil-rice system were used to assess the capability of different metal speciation transfer from soil to rice. The carbonate and Fe/Mn oxyhydroxides bound phase had significant positive correlations with total metal concentrations in rice. Hg uptake by rice might be related to the exchangeable and carbonate-bound fractions of soil Hg. Results of PCA analysis of transfer factors estimated that the labile fractions (i.e. water soluble, exchangeable and carbonate bound) contributed more than 40% of the heavy metal accumulations in rice. Effect of organic matter and residue fraction on metals transfer was estimated to be similar to 25 to similar to 30% while contribution of humic acid and Fe/Mn oxyhydroxides-bound fractions was estimated to be similar to 20 to similar to 30%. Modified risk assessment code (mRAC) and ecological contamination index (ECI) confirmed that the soil samples were polluted by heavy metals. Soil Cd contributed more than 80% of mRAC. Contrarily, the main contributors to ECI were identified as As, Hg, Pb and Zn. The average values of total target hazard quotient (TTHQ) and Risk total were above 1 and 10(-4) respectively, implying people living in the study area were exposed to both non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risk. As and Pb were the main contributor to high TTHQ value while As, Cd and Cr in rice contributed mostly to Risk totai value. Spatial changes of ecological risk indexes and human health risk indexes showed that the samples with high TTHQ values distributed in the area with high values of mRAC. Likewise, the area with high ECI values and with high carcinogenic risk overlapped.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available