Heavy metal pollution in vegetables grown in the vicinity of a multi-metal mining area in Gejiu, China: Total concentrations, speciation analysis, and health risk

Li, Y; Wang, H; Wang, H; Yin, F; Yang, X; Hu, Y

HERO ID

2345627

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

24952252

HERO ID 2345627
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Heavy metal pollution in vegetables grown in the vicinity of a multi-metal mining area in Gejiu, China: Total concentrations, speciation analysis, and health risk
Authors Li, Y; Wang, H; Wang, H; Yin, F; Yang, X; Hu, Y
Journal Environmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume 21
Issue 21
Page Numbers 12569-12582
Abstract A field survey was conducted to investigate the present situation and health risk of arsenic (As), lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), and zinc (Zn) in soils and vegetables in a multi-metal mining area, Gejiu, China. Furthermore, three vegetables (water spinach, potato, and summer squash) containing high metal concentrations were selected to further analyze metal speciation. The results showed that the average concentrations of five metals in soil exceeded the limiting values, and their bioavailable concentrations were significantly positively correlated to the total ones. Heavy metals in the edible parts of vegetables also exceeded the corresponding standards. The leaves of pakchoi, peppermint, and coriander had a strong metal-accumulative ability and they were not suitable for planting. Except the residue forms, the main forms of metals in the edible parts of three selected vegetables were ethanol-, NaCl-, and HAc-extractable fractions for As, Pb, and Cd, respectively; however, Cu was mainly presented as NaCl-extractable and Zn as HAc-extractable fractions. A high proportion of ethanol-extractable As showed that As bioactivity and toxic effects were the highest. Although the total and bioavailable Cd were high in soil, its speciation in vegetables was mainly presented as HAc-extractable fraction, which has a relatively low bioactivity. Lead and arsenic were imposing a serious threat on the local residents via vegetable consumption.
Doi 10.1007/s11356-014-3188-x
Pmid 24952252
Wosid WOS:000343918400048
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Heavy metals; Vegetables; Speciation; Health risk