Evaluation of Metal Mobility and Bioaccessibility in Soils of Urban Vegetable Gardens Using Sequential Extraction

被引:0
作者
Zsuzsanna Szolnoki
Andrea Farsang
机构
[1] University of Szeged,Department of Physical Geography and Geoinformatics
来源
Water, Air, & Soil Pollution | 2013年 / 224卷
关键词
Soils of urban vegetable gardens; Heavy metals; Sequential extraction; Mobilisation; Bioaccumulation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Urban soils are recipients of a variety of pollutants, including the toxic heavy metals, which can accumulate in these soils. The consumption of vegetables and fruits grown in urban gardens with elevated heavy metal content may pose a health risk to residents, because the plants can absorb the heavy metals to different degrees depending on a number of factors (soil properties, forms of metals, plant specific factors, etc.). Total metal content and heavy metal fractions were determined using a sequential extraction procedure in the soils of urban vegetable gardens in order to assess both mobile and potentially mobile amounts of heavy metals in these soils. The heavy metal content of different vegetable types grown in these gardens and those soil properties relevant to controlling metal mobility were also investigated. Soil properties of the studied vegetable gardens influenced metal retention positively, but these soils were not heavily contaminated with metals. The high content of total Pb, Cu, Zn and Cd in the mobile and potentially mobile fractions did, however, indicate a possible anthropogenic enrichment of these metals. The vegetables grown in these gardens accumulated no toxic metal content but the concentration of Cu in the studied vegetables was generally higher than the mean Cu content of different plant foodstuffs, clearly indicating an anthropogenic impact on the Cu status of these soils. Based on the calculated bioaccumulation indices and in accordance with the result of the sequential extraction, Zn and Cd were the most mobile elements in the present soil–plant system.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 121 条
  • [11] Szolnoki Z(2000)Schwermetallstatus Rostocker Gartenböden Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Sciences 163 191-196
  • [12] Finster ME(2006)Fractionation of metals in street sediment samples by using the BCR sequential extraction procedure and multivariate statistical elucidation of the data Journal of Hazardous Material 132 80-89
  • [13] Gray KA(1996)Urban Geochemistry: a study of the influence of anthropogenic activity on the heavy metal content of soils in traditionally industrial and non-industrial areas of Britain Applied Geochemistry 11 363-370
  • [14] Binns HJ(2009)Effect of composts, lime and diammonium phosphate on the phytoavailability of heavy metals in a copper mine tailing soil Pedosphere 19 631-641
  • [15] Harrison RM(2003)Concentrations and chemical speciations of Cu, Zn, Pb and Cr of urban soils in Nanjing, China Geoderma 115 101-111
  • [16] Laxen DPH(2011)Distribution, availability, and sources of trace metals in different particle size fractions of urban soils in Hong Kong: implications for assessing the risk to human health Environmental Pollution 159 1317-1326
  • [17] Willson SJ(1998)Soils is an important pathway of human lead exposure Environmental Health Perspectives 106 217-229
  • [18] Hough RL(1989)Lead and cadmium in urban allotment and garden soils and vegetables in the United Kingdom Environmental Geochemistry and Health 11 113-119
  • [19] Breward N(2004)Heavy metal distribution in marine sediments from the southwest coast of Spain Chemosphere 55 431-442
  • [20] Young SD(2011)Compost application affects metal uptake in plants grown in urban garden soils and potential human health risk Journal of Soils and Sediments 11 815-829