Arsenic contamination in agricultural soils of Bengal deltaic region of West Bengal and its higher assimilation in monsoon rice

Shrivastava, A; Barla, A; Singh, S; Mandraha, S; Bose, S

HERO ID

3987047

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

27865606

HERO ID 3987047
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Arsenic contamination in agricultural soils of Bengal deltaic region of West Bengal and its higher assimilation in monsoon rice
Authors Shrivastava, A; Barla, A; Singh, S; Mandraha, S; Bose, S
Journal Journal of Hazardous Materials
Volume 324
Issue Pt B
Page Numbers 526-534
Abstract In the Bengal deltaic region, the shallow groundwater laced with arsenic is used for irrigation frequently and has elevated the soil arsenic in agricultural soil. However, the areas with seasonal flooding reduce arsenic in top layers of the soils. Study shows arsenic accumulation in the deeper soil layers with time in the contaminated agricultural soil (19.40±0.38mg/kg in 0-5cm, 27.17±0.44mg/kg in 5-10cm and 41.24±0.48mg/kg in 10-15cm) in 2013 whereas depletion in 2014 and its buildup in different parts of monsoon rice plant in Nadia, India. Principal Component Analysis and Cluster Analysis were performed, and Enrichment Factor was calculated to identify the sources of arsenic in the soil. Potential Ecological Risk was also calculated to estimate the extent of risk posed by arsenic in soil, along with the potential risk of dietary arsenic exposure. Remarkably, the concentration of arsenic detected in the rice grain showed average value of 1.4mg/kg in 2013 which has increased to 1.6 in 2014, both being above the permissible limit (1mg/kg). These results indicate that monsoon flooding enhances the infiltration of arsenic in the deeper soil layer, which lead to further contamination of shallow groundwater.
Doi 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2016.11.022
Pmid 27865606
Wosid WOS:000390182600046
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English