4.7 Article

Trophic transfer of heavy metals along a pollution gradient in a terrestrial agro-industrial food web

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 413, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2022.115748

Keywords

Bioaccumulation; Biodilution; Soil; Plant; Arthropod; Vertebrate

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Support Fund Program of the Faculty of Science, Cairo University, Egypt
  2. grant ENVIE from the Institut Universitaire de France (Paris, France)
  3. project PRICES (University of Rennes 1, UMR CNRS EcoBio, Rennes, France)

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The transfer pathways and effects of heavy metal contamination in a food web are complex, influenced by environmental discharges, atmospheric transport, and rainfall events. Our study found that lower trophic levels tend to bioaccumulate chromium and nickel, while higher trophic levels may experience biodilution.
Heavy metal contamination across the food web is a growing concern because of increasing environmental discharges in industrial zones, atmospheric transport, and deposition and erosion during rainfall events. We examined the transfer pathways of chromium (Cr) and nickel (Ni) through a terrestrial trophic web and inves-tigated the potential for their bioaccumulation along the trophic chain. Soil, plants, arthropods, and vertebrates were sampled from different localities in the south of Cairo (El-Tebbin, Egypt) and the amounts of Cr and Ni from these samples were measured. We also computed a body condition index (BCI) for vertebrates to estimate in-dividual health and fitness levels in relation to heavy metal concentrations in the liver. The levels of Cr and Ni varied significantly among the samples. Lower trophic levels showed a tendency for biomagnification, while higher trophic levels showed possible biodilution of the two heavy metals: arthropods, amphibians, and lizards concentrated more Cr and Ni than the other taxonomic groups; conversely birds and small mammals generally showed lower levels of Cr and Ni. A negative relationship was obtained when the concentrations of Cr in the soil, plant, and arthropods, and the concentrations of Ni in the wolf spider were plotted as a function of the distance to the industrial area. A significant inverse relationship was found between the Ni concentration of liver and body length, while body mass had no significant effect. Our study thus highlights the varied effects of heavy metal concentrations across a complex food web at different distances from the pollution source, and the need for further studies of their effect on multiple species in an ecosystem.

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