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Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China

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Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China. / Williams, Paul N; Lei, Ming; Sun, Guoxin et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 43, No. 3, 2009, p. 637-642.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Williams, PN, Lei, M, Sun, G, Huang, Q, Lu, Y, Deacon, C, Meharg, AA & Zhu, Y-G 2009, 'Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 637-642. https://doi.org/10.1021/es802412r

APA

Williams, P. N., Lei, M., Sun, G., Huang, Q., Lu, Y., Deacon, C., Meharg, A. A., & Zhu, Y.-G. (2009). Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China. Environmental Science and Technology, 43(3), 637-642. https://doi.org/10.1021/es802412r

Vancouver

Williams PN, Lei M, Sun G, Huang Q, Lu Y, Deacon C et al. Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China. Environmental Science and Technology. 2009;43(3):637-642. doi: 10.1021/es802412r

Author

Williams, Paul N ; Lei, Ming ; Sun, Guoxin et al. / Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 2009 ; Vol. 43, No. 3. pp. 637-642.

Bibtex

@article{f3d316a4b0324ae6aa10cdd50f87a31c,
title = "Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China",
abstract = "Paddy rice has been likened to nictiana sp in its ability to scavenge cadmium (Cd) from soil, whereas arsenic (As) accumulation is commonly an order of magnitude higher than in other cereal crops. In areas such as those found in parts of Hunan province in south central China, base-metal mining activities and rice farming coexist. Therefore there is a considerable likelihood that lead (Pb), in addition to Cd and As, will accumulate in rice grown in parts of this region above levels suitable for human consumption. To test this hypothesis, a widespread provincial survey of rice from mine spoilt paddies (n = 100), in addition to a follow-up market grain survey (n = 122) conducted in mine impacted areas was undertaken to determine the safety of local rice supply networks. Furthermore, a specific Cd, As, and Pb biogeochemical survey of paddy soil and rice was conducted within southern China, targeting sites impacted by mining of varying intensities to calibrate rice metal(loid) transfer models and transfer factors that can be used to predict tissue loading. Results revealed a number of highly significant correlations between shoot, husk, bran, and endosperm rice tissue fractions and that rice from mining areas was enriched in Cd, As, and Pb. Sixty-five, 50, and 34% of all the mine-impacted field rice was predicted to fail national food standards for Cd, As, and Pb, respectively. Although, not as elevated as the grains from the mine-impacted field survey, it was demonstrated that metal(loid) tainted rice was entering food supply chains intended for direct human consumption.",
author = "Williams, {Paul N} and Ming Lei and Guoxin Sun and Qing Huang and Ying Lu and Claire Deacon and Meharg, {Andrew A} and Yong-Guan Zhu",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1021/es802412r",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "637--642",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Occurrence and partitioning of cadmium, arsenic and lead in mine impacted paddy rice: Hunan, China

AU - Williams, Paul N

AU - Lei, Ming

AU - Sun, Guoxin

AU - Huang, Qing

AU - Lu, Ying

AU - Deacon, Claire

AU - Meharg, Andrew A

AU - Zhu, Yong-Guan

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Paddy rice has been likened to nictiana sp in its ability to scavenge cadmium (Cd) from soil, whereas arsenic (As) accumulation is commonly an order of magnitude higher than in other cereal crops. In areas such as those found in parts of Hunan province in south central China, base-metal mining activities and rice farming coexist. Therefore there is a considerable likelihood that lead (Pb), in addition to Cd and As, will accumulate in rice grown in parts of this region above levels suitable for human consumption. To test this hypothesis, a widespread provincial survey of rice from mine spoilt paddies (n = 100), in addition to a follow-up market grain survey (n = 122) conducted in mine impacted areas was undertaken to determine the safety of local rice supply networks. Furthermore, a specific Cd, As, and Pb biogeochemical survey of paddy soil and rice was conducted within southern China, targeting sites impacted by mining of varying intensities to calibrate rice metal(loid) transfer models and transfer factors that can be used to predict tissue loading. Results revealed a number of highly significant correlations between shoot, husk, bran, and endosperm rice tissue fractions and that rice from mining areas was enriched in Cd, As, and Pb. Sixty-five, 50, and 34% of all the mine-impacted field rice was predicted to fail national food standards for Cd, As, and Pb, respectively. Although, not as elevated as the grains from the mine-impacted field survey, it was demonstrated that metal(loid) tainted rice was entering food supply chains intended for direct human consumption.

AB - Paddy rice has been likened to nictiana sp in its ability to scavenge cadmium (Cd) from soil, whereas arsenic (As) accumulation is commonly an order of magnitude higher than in other cereal crops. In areas such as those found in parts of Hunan province in south central China, base-metal mining activities and rice farming coexist. Therefore there is a considerable likelihood that lead (Pb), in addition to Cd and As, will accumulate in rice grown in parts of this region above levels suitable for human consumption. To test this hypothesis, a widespread provincial survey of rice from mine spoilt paddies (n = 100), in addition to a follow-up market grain survey (n = 122) conducted in mine impacted areas was undertaken to determine the safety of local rice supply networks. Furthermore, a specific Cd, As, and Pb biogeochemical survey of paddy soil and rice was conducted within southern China, targeting sites impacted by mining of varying intensities to calibrate rice metal(loid) transfer models and transfer factors that can be used to predict tissue loading. Results revealed a number of highly significant correlations between shoot, husk, bran, and endosperm rice tissue fractions and that rice from mining areas was enriched in Cd, As, and Pb. Sixty-five, 50, and 34% of all the mine-impacted field rice was predicted to fail national food standards for Cd, As, and Pb, respectively. Although, not as elevated as the grains from the mine-impacted field survey, it was demonstrated that metal(loid) tainted rice was entering food supply chains intended for direct human consumption.

U2 - 10.1021/es802412r

DO - 10.1021/es802412r

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19244995

VL - 43

SP - 637

EP - 642

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 3

ER -