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Title

Ecological health risk assessment of microplastics and heavy metals in sediments, water, hydrophytes (Alternanthera philoxeroides, Typha latifolia, and Ipomoea carnea), and fish (Labeo rohita) in Marala wetlands in Sialkot, Pakistan.

Authors

Arshad, Komal; Aqeel, Muhammad; Noman, Ali; Nazir, Atia; Mahmood, Adeel; Rizvi, Zarrin Fatima; Sarfraz, Wajiha; Hyder, Sajjad; Zaka, Shanza; Khalid, Noreen

Abstract

For the ecological risk assessment of heavy metals and microplastics in Marala wetlands in Sialkot, Pakistan, samples of sediments, water, aquatic plants (Alternanthera philoxeroides, Typha latifolia, and Ipomoea carnea), and fish (Labeo rohita) were studied from five different locations. Pb, Cd, and Cr concentrations were above permissible limits devised by WHO in sediments and water at most of sites. High concentrations of Cd were recorded in water samples compared to sediments with maximum values recorded at Site-2 (52.08 ± 9.55 mg kg−1) and Site-5 (62.29 ± 10.12 mg kg−1). The maximum concentrations of Cr (7.23 ± 0.40 mg kg−1) and Pb (22.87 ± 0.83 mg kg−1) were found at Site-4 in water samples. The maximum abundance of microplastics (3047 pieces kg−1 of sediments) was at Site-1 with filaments in the highest proportion among the other types. Zn, Ni, and Cu remained generally low in concentrations in both sediments and waters. Plants showed accumulation of heavy metals, notably the amount of Cd (33.36 ± 0.26 mgkg−1) and Ni (163.3 ± 1.30 mgkg−1) absorbed by T. latifolia and A. philoxeroides, respectively were high. Also, photosynthetic pigments in plants seemed to be affected. However, estimated daily intake (EDI) and provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI) calculations for the human population consuming fish from this wetland remained below the FAO/WHO limits. PCA analysis revealed the anthropogenic origin of metals that might be causing adverse effects on the biota which depend on this wetland for their food.

Subjects

TYPHA latifolia; ECOLOGICAL risk assessment; HEALTH risk assessment; ROHU; HEAVY metals; IPOMOEA

Publication

Environmental Science & Pollution Research, 2023, Vol 30, Issue 14, p41272

ISSN

0944-1344

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s11356-023-25142-1

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