volume 115 issue 1-3 pages 1-22

Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2006-02-15
scimago Q2
wos Q3
SJR0.690
CiteScore5.0
Impact factor3.0
ISSN01676369, 15732959
General Medicine
Pollution
General Environmental Science
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Abstract
The implications of metal contamination of agricultural soils due to long term irrigation with treated industrial wastewater and their subsequent accumulation in the vegetables/crops growing on such soils has been assessed in an area of industrial complex, Jajmau, Kanpur (India). Physico-chemical properties of the soil were also studied. The soil and vegetables/crops were sampled from an area of 2100 acre agricultural land and analyzed for physico-chemical properties and metal accumulation in different parts of the plants. The comparison of the data of physico-chemical properties of control and contaminated soil showed that salinity, electrical conductivity, available phosphorous, sodium and potassium content (both water soluble and exchangeable) were found high in contaminated soil. The analysis of plant available metal content in the soil showed the highest level of Fe, which ranged from 529.02 to 2615 μg g−1 dw and lowest level of Ni (3.12 to 10.51 μg g−1 dw). The analysis of the results revealed that accumulation of toxic metal Cr in leafy vegetables was found more than fruit bearing vegetables/crops. Thus, it is recommended that the leafy vegetables are unsuitable to grow in such contaminated sites. It is important to note that toxic metal, Ni was not detected in all the plants. The edible part of the vegetables (under ground) such as, garlic (19.27 μg g−1 dw), potato (11.81 μg g−1 dw) and turmeric (20.86 μg g−1 dw) has accumulated lowest level of toxic metal, Cr than leafy and fruit bearing vegetables. In some fruit part of vegetables such as, bitter gourd, egg plant, jack tree, maize and okra, the accumulation of Cr was not detected and may be grown in this area.
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GOST Copy
Sinha S. et al. Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil // Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. 2006. Vol. 115. No. 1-3. pp. 1-22.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Sinha S., Gupta A. K., BHATT K., Pandey K., Rai U. N., Singh K. P. Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil // Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. 2006. Vol. 115. No. 1-3. pp. 1-22.
RIS |
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RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1007/s10661-006-5036-z
UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-006-5036-z
TI - Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil
T2 - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
AU - Sinha, S
AU - Gupta, A. K.
AU - BHATT, K.
AU - Pandey, K
AU - Rai, U. N.
AU - Singh, K. P.
PY - 2006
DA - 2006/02/15
PB - Springer Nature
SP - 1-22
IS - 1-3
VL - 115
PMID - 16502026
SN - 0167-6369
SN - 1573-2959
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2006_Sinha,
author = {S Sinha and A. K. Gupta and K. BHATT and K Pandey and U. N. Rai and K. P. Singh},
title = {Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil},
journal = {Environmental Monitoring and Assessment},
year = {2006},
volume = {115},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {feb},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-006-5036-z},
number = {1-3},
pages = {1--22},
doi = {10.1007/s10661-006-5036-z}
}
MLA
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MLA Copy
Sinha, S., et al. “Distribution of Metals in the Edible Plants Grown at Jajmau, Kanpur (India) Receiving Treated Tannery Wastewater: Relation with Physico-Chemical Properties of the Soil.” Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, vol. 115, no. 1-3, Feb. 2006, pp. 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-006-5036-z.