4.7 Article

Anthropic impact on soil heavy metal contamination in riparian ecosystems of northern Algeria

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 313, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.137522

Keywords

Soil pollutants; Agriculture; Urbanization; Environmental indicators; Biological monitoring; Risk assessment

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The aim of this research was to investigate the impact of urbanization and agriculture on soil quality by studying heavy metal accumulation in the riparian ecosystems of Medjerda river. The study found higher concentrations of heavy metals in urban and peri-urban areas compared to non-urban areas. The results also showed a strong impact of heavy metals on soil quality in urban areas.
The aim of this research was to highlight the impact of urbanization and agriculture on soil quality, mainly by focusing on heavy metal accumulation (Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn) in the fragile riparian ecosystems of the Medjerda river (Souk-Ahras, Algeria). This study was performed in three cultivated soils (0-10, 10-20, 20-60 cm depth) along an increasing gradient of anthropogenic pressure in non-urban (NU), peri-urban (PU) and urban areas (U). Geo-accumulation index (Igeo), Enrichment factor (EF), Pollution load index (PLI) and Potential ecological risk index (RI) were calculated, as well as the potential non-carcinogenic risk for humans (HI). Additionally, to corroborate the role of Bufo spinosus D. as biosentinel, a skin biopsy was performed to quantify the concentration of heavy metals in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. The results showed that when compared to NU, U and PU areas were richer in heavy metals. In particular, Igeo-Cd displayed strongly contaminated soil in U (>3), EF showed high enrichment of heavy metals (>2) for all the soils except for Ni, PLI presented no contamination for all (<1) while RI was significantly higher in U (>300), denoting a strong impact of heavy metals on soil quality. However, HI was below 1 for all the studied areas, although the highest values were related to U and PU. The skin biopsy showed the highest values for Cu, Fe and Pb in PU (0.328, 0.713 and 0.524 mg kg- 1, respectively) similarly to trends observed in the soil of that area. This

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