4.7 Article

Effects of alternating wetting and drying versus continuous flooding on chromium fate in paddy soils

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY
Volume 113, Issue -, Pages 439-445

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2014.12.030

Keywords

Chromium(VI) concentration; Soil redox potential; Continuous flooding; Alternating wetting and drying; Oryza sativa L.

Funding

  1. Ministry of Environmental Protection of China [2011467057]
  2. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LY12E09008]
  3. Science and Technology Innovation Ability Promotion Project of the Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences

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Anthropogenic chromium (Cr) pollution in soils poses a great threat to human health through the food chain. It is imperative to understand Cr fate under the range of conditions suitable for rice growth. In this study, the effects of irrigation managements on dynamics of porewater Cr(VI) concentrations in rice paddies and Cr distribution in rice were investigated with pot experiments under greenhouse conditions. Soil redox potential in continuous flooding (CF) treatments showed that reducing conditions remained for the whole duration of rice growing period, while soil redox potential in alternating wetting and drying (AWD) treatments showed that soil conditions alternately changed between reducing and oxic. As soil redox potential is an important factor affecting Cr(VI) reduction in paddy soils, dynamics of Cr(VI) concentration were clearly different under different irrigation managements. In CF treatments, porewater Cr(VI) concentrations decreased with time after planting, while in AWD treatments porewater Cr(VI) concentrations were increased and decreased alternately response to the irrigation cycles. Chromium(VI) concentrations in the CF treatments were lower than those in AWD treatments for most part of rice-growing season. Moreover, Cr concentrations in rice tissues were significantly influenced by irrigation with relatively higher values in the AWD treatments, which might be attributed to the higher porewater Cr(VI) concentrations in AWD treatments. Therefore, it would be better to use CF than AWD management in Cr-contaminated paddy soils to reduce Cr accumulation in rice, and thus to reduce the potential risk to human health. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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