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- Title
Lead in Agricultural Soils and Cultivated Pastures Irrigated with River Water Contaminated by Mining Activity.
- Authors
Orellana, Edith; Custodio, María; Bastos, María Carolina; Cuadrado, Walter
- Abstract
Agricultural soils that have been irrigated with the contaminated water from metallurgical mining activities for more than 70 years constitute an environmental problem as well as a concern for food security and human health. The presence of lead in the soil and cultivated pastures is highly dangerous, due to its toxicity, persistence and accumulation in plants and animals (cattle). This element enters the trophic chain of humans due to the intake of meat, milk and its derivatives. The concentration of lead was determined in the soil and the cultivated pastures with Lolium x hybridum Hausskn and Medicago sativa L. The soil and pastures samples collected from plots irrigated with river water contaminated with heavy metals at a depth of 0-20 cm. The content of Pb determined by the atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The results showed the lead concentrations in soil in the range of environmental quality standards for soils according to Peruvian regulations. In the soil with L. x hybridum and M. sativa the average content of lead was 57.17 ± 6.29 mg.kg-1 and 57.19 ± 8.99 mg.kg-1; in the above-ground tissues were 1.17 ± 0.69 mg.kg-1 and 1.62 ± 0.68 mg.kg-1, respectively. In addition, no significant differences were observed in the Pb content in the soil and plant tissues. The bioconcentration factor (BCF) in the above-ground tissues of L. x hybridum and M. sativa was less than one and they were not significant. Therefore, irrigation with long-term contaminated water is not a concern for the farmers in the Mantaro Valley.
- Subjects
LEAD in soils; MINE water; PASTURES; ATOMIC absorption spectroscopy; ENVIRONMENTAL quality; HEAVY metal content of water; ANALYSIS of river sediments; LEAD toxicology
- Publication
Journal of Ecological Engineering, 2019, Vol 20, Issue 8, p238
- ISSN
2299-8993
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.12911/22998993/111715