| Literature DB >> 27218003 |
Ashita Sharma1, Jatinder Kaur Katnoria1, Avinash Kaur Nagpal1.
Abstract
Irrigation of agricultural land with wastewater leads to continuous buildup of metals at these sites which gets accumulated in the vegetables and crops growing on these sites. Not just the crops irrigated with wastewater are hazardous, in present study, we have found that vegetables growing in vicinity of wastewater drain are also not safe for human consumption. The risk associated with consumption of vegetables was assessed by calculating hazard quotient and results revealed that the hazard quotient for leafy and tuberous vegetables was higher than the safe limits in all the sites irrespective of mode of irrigation. Spinach was the most hazardous among all as the hazard quotient with respect to cobalt and copper was highest in spinach. Uptake trend of metals in all vegetables: Iron > Cobalt > Copper > Cadmium > Lead. Cadmium, a potential carcinogen was found in concentrations higher than permissible limits in many vegetables from all sites. Highest level of cadmium (1.20 mg/kg) and copper (81.33 mg/kg) was reported in site which was in vicinity of waste water drain but irrigated with ground water. Concentration of copper and lead in vegetable samples from different sites exhibited no statistically significant difference with respect to different sites.Entities:
Keywords: Hazard quotient; Heavy metals; Metal pollution index; Vegetables; Wastewater
Year: 2016 PMID: 27218003 PMCID: PMC4837749 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-2129-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Vegetable samples collected from experimental sites
| Edible part | Vegetable (common name) | Botanical name | Family |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leaf and stem | Coriander |
| Apiaceae |
| Fenugreek |
| Fabaceae | |
| Mint |
| Lamiaceae | |
| Spinach |
| Amaranthaceae | |
| Fruits | Brinjal |
| Solanaceae |
| Bottle Gourd |
| Cucurbitaceae | |
| Lady Finger |
| Malvaceae | |
| Green Chilli |
| Solanaceae | |
| Tubers | Radish |
| Brassicaceae |
| Turnip |
| Brassicaceae | |
| Bulbs | Onion |
| Amaryllidaceae |
| Garlic |
| Amaryllidaceae |
Fig. 1Description of sites
Table showing reference oral dose for metals
| S. no. | Metal | Reference oral dose (mg/kg/day) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Cadmium | 0.001 | US EPA ( |
| 2. | Copper | 0.04 | US EPA ( |
| 3. | Cobalt | 0.043 | Food and Nutrition Board ( |
| 4. | Lead | 0.004 | US EPA ( |
| 5. | Iron | 0.7 | US EPA ( |
Fig. 2Content of cadmium in vegetables from all the sites
Fig. 3Content of cobalt in vegetables from different sites
Fig. 4Content of copper in vegetables from different sites
Fig. 5Graph representing content of iron in vegetables from different sites
Fig. 6Content of lead in vegetables from different site
Two way ANOVA summary table
| Metal | Site | Vegetables | Site × vegetables |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cadmium | 13.938** | 5.023** | 4.372** |
| Copper | 7.044* | 14.346** | 3.193** |
| Iron | 13.106* | 51.320** | 9.245* |
| Lead | 0.696 | 0.850 | 0.269 |
| Cobalt | 19.614** | 7.240** | 1.644 |
** Level of significance; p < 0.001
* Level of significance; p < 0.01
Summary of post hoc Tukey HSD test with respect to sites
| Site (i) | Site (j) | Cadmium mean difference (i–j) | Cobalt mean difference (i–j) | Copper mean difference (i–j) | Iron mean difference (i–j) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | −0.1278 | −2.5056 | 9.6333* | −14.5556 |
| 3 | −0.3167* | −33.3778* | 7.5222* | −91.9944* | |
| 2 | 1 | 0.1278 | 2.5056 | −9.6333* | 14.5556 |
| 3 | −0.1889* | −30.8722* | −2.1111 | −77.4389* | |
| 3 | 1 | 0.3167* | 33.3778* | −7.5222* | 91.9944* |
| 2 | 0.1889* | 30.8722* | 2.1111 | 77.4389* |
* Significant at p < 0.01
Fig. 7Metal pollution index of vegetables from different sites
Fig. 8Hazard quotient of cadmium, lead and iron of different vegetables from three sites
Fig. 9Hazard quotient of cobalt and copper of different vegetables from three sites
Fig. 10Representation of risk associated with metals present in various vegetables from different sites