2009

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  • PublicationArticle
    Heavy metals in vegetables collected from production and market sites of a tropical urban area of India
    (2009) Rajesh Kumar Sharma; Madhoolika Agrawal; Fiona M Marshall
    Vegetables (Beta vulgaris L., Abelmoschus esculentus L. and Brassica oleracea L.) from the production and market sites of India were tested for Cu, Cd, Zn and Pb. At market sites, the mean concentration of Cu in cauliflower, and of Zn and Cd in both palak and cauliflower had exceeded the PFA standard. Zn at the production sites also exceeded the PFA standard in cauliflower. Cd concentration in vegetables tested from both production and market sites was many folds higher than the EU standard. In contrast, Pb in vegetables tested from both production and market sites was below the PFA limit, but was considerably higher than the current EU and WHO standards. Heavy metals accumulation in vegetables tested are higher at market sites than those at the crop production sites. The contributions of these vegetables to dietary intake of Cu, Zn, Cd and Pb were 13%, 1%, 47% and 9% of provisional tolerable daily intake, respectively. The study concludes that the transportation and marketing systems of vegetables play a significant role in elevating the contaminant levels of heavy metals which may pose a threat to the quality of the vegetables with consequences for the health of the consumers of locally produced foodstuffs. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • PublicationArticle
    Effects of wastewater irrigation on physicochemical properties of soil and availability of heavy metals in soil and vegetables
    (2009) Anita Singh; Rajesh K. Sharma; Madhoolika Agrawal; F. Marshall
    The present study investigated the impact of irrigation with wastewater on nutritional property and heavy-metal concentrations in the soil and consequent accumulation in vegetables at sites having long-term uses of wastewater for irrigation. Samples of irrigation water, soil, and root and shoot parts of palak plants were analyzed to determine the concentration of heavy metals. Wastewater irrigation led to increases in the total and phytoavailable heavy-metal concentrations in the soil at all the sites. Heavy-metal concentrations in soil under wastewater irrigation were negatively and positively correlated with soil hydrogen potential (pH) and organic carbon (OC), respectively. The enrichment factor and metal pollution index were higher at wastewater-irrigated sites as compared to the clean water-irrigated ones. The study concludes that wastewater irrigation modified the physicochemical properties of the soil, leading to more availability of heavy metals in the soil and consequently to the plant. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.