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    Chromium contamination in paddy soil-rice systems and associated human health risks in Pakistan

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    Authors
    Ali, W.
    Zhang, H.
    Mao, K.
    Shafeeque, Muhammad
    Aslam, M. W.
    Yang, X.
    Zhong, L.
    Feng, X.
    Podgorski, J.
    Date Issued
    2022-06
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Limited Access
    Usage rights
    Copyrighted; all rights reserved
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    Citation
    Ali, W.; Zhang, H.; Mao, K.; Shafeeque, Muhammad; Aslam, M. W.; Yang, X.; Zhong, L.; Feng, X.; Podgorski, J. 2022. Chromium contamination in paddy soil-rice systems and associated human health risks in Pakistan. Science of the Total Environment, 826:153910. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153910]
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121055
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153910
    Abstract/Description
    Chromium (Cr) contamination in paddy soil-rice systems threatens human health through the food chain. This study used a new dataset of 500 paddy soil and plant tissue samples collected in the rice-growing regions of Sindh and Punjab Provinces of Pakistan. Overall, 97.4% of grain samples exceeded the Cr threshold values of 1.0 mg kg-1, determined by the China National Food Standard (CNFS). The Cr in paddy soil, 62.6% samples exceeding the China natural background threshold value (90 mg kg-1) for Cr concentration in paddy soil, and lower than the (pH-dependant > 7.5 threshold value for Cr 350 mg kg-1) as determined by China Environmental Quality Standards (EQSs) for paddy soil (GB15618-2018). Geographically weighted regression (GWR) modelling showed spatially nonstationary correlations, confirming the heterogeneous relationship between dependent (rice grain Cr) and independent paddy soil (pH, SOM, and paddy soil Cr) and plant tissue variables (shoot Cr and root Cr) throughout the study area. The GWR model was then used to determine the critical threshold (CT) for the measured Cr concentrations in the paddy soil system. Overall, 38.4% of paddy soil samples exceeding CT values confirm that the paddy soil Cr risk prevails in the study area. Furthermore, the GWR model was applied to assess the loading capacity (LC), the difference between the CT, and the actual concentration of Cr in paddy soil. Loading capacity identified potential paddy soil Cr pollution risk to rice grain and assessed the risk areas. Overall LC% of samples paddy soil Cr risk areas grade: low-risk grade I (34.6%); moderate-risk grade II (15.8%); high-risk grade III (11.2%); and very high-risk grade IV (38.4%) have been assessed in the study area. The human health index, total hazard quotient (THQ « 1), indicates no potential health risk originating from Cr exposure to the population. However, the excess Cr level in paddy soil and rice grain is still a concern. The current study's results are also valuable for the national decision-making process regarding Cr contamination in the paddy soil-rice system.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    chromium; contamination; paddy soils; rice fields; human health; health hazards; risk assessment; metals; physicochemical properties; bioaccumulation factor; translocation; modelling
    Countries
    Pakistan
    Regions
    Southern Asia
    Investors/sponsors
    President's International Fellowship Initiative; National Natural Science Foundation of China; Science and Technology Program of Guizhou Province, China; China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
    Collections
    • IWMI Journal Articles [2546]

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