| Literature DB >> 30380681 |
Wei-Hong Wang1,2, Xue-Gang Luo3,4, Zhe Wang5, Yu Zeng6, Feng-Qiang Wu7, Zhong-Xiang Li8.
Abstract
To investigate the heavy metal and metalloid contamination of soil around a Huanan uranium tailings pond, abandoned in 1998, we defined a study area of 41.25 km² by a natural boundary and targeted 5 elements' (U, Mn, As, Pb, Cr) single contamination and comprehensive pollution as the assessment contents. First, we collected 205 samples and evaluated them with the contamination factor (CF) method aiming at judging whether the single target element concentration exceeded the local background value and environmental quality standard. We obtained CF₁ (the background value of a certain target element as the baseline value) and CF₂ (the environmental quality standard for soils as the baseline value). Second, we evaluated the ecological risk of the key pollutant U with the risk assessment code (RAC) method, taking the 27 samples whose CF₂ > 1 as examples and concluded that the environmental risk of U was relatively high and should arouse concern. Third, we selected comprehensive pollution index (CPI) to assess the compound pollution degree of five target elements. Fourth, we constructed the U contamination and CPI's continuous distribution maps with spatial interpolation, from which we worked out the sizes and positions of slightly, moderately and strongly polluted zones. Finally, we analyzed the spatial variability of U and CPI with the aid of a geostatistical variogram. We deduced that the spatial variation of uranium was in close relationship with local topography, and probably precipitation was the driving force of U contamination diffusion, whereas CPI exhibited weak spatial dependence with random characteristics. The above work showed that 3.14 km² soil near the pond was fairly seriously polluted, and the other 4 elements' single contaminations were less serious, but the 5 target elements' cumulative pollution could not be ignored; there were other potential pollution sources besides the uranium tailings pond. Some emergency measures should be taken to treat U pollution, and bioremediation is recommended, taking account into U's high bioavailability. Further, special alerts should be implemented to identify the other pollution sources.Entities:
Keywords: comprehensive pollution index (CPI); heavy metal and metalloid pollution assessment; spatial distribution; spatial variability; uranium tailings pond
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30380681 PMCID: PMC6267490 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15112401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The study area.
Descriptive statistical summary of five target element concentrations in soil samples.
| Statistical Quantity | U | Mn | As | Pb | Cr |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (mg/Kg) | 13.69 | 398.27 | 17.56 | 31.09 | 71.90 |
| Standard deviation(mg/Kg) | 14.48 | 270.58 | 7.25 | 9.44 | 8.94 |
| Maximum (mg/Kg) | 120.52 | 1603.28 | 66.68 | 60.38 | 96.43 |
| Minimum (mg/Kg) | 3.21 | 104.01 | 6.17 | 7.16 | 48.39 |
| Skewness | 13.16 | 8.66 | 12.64 | 2.84 | 0.11 |
| Kurtosis | 181.68 | 98.03 | 172.14 | 12.91 | 12.45 |
| Local background value * | 4.2 | 441 | 14 | 27 | 68 |
| Environmental quality standard for soils ** | 15.5 | 1500 | 40 | 80 | 150 |
Notes: * Local background values were from Soil Background Values and Its Research Methods in Hunan Province, China. Beijing, China Environmental Science Press [28]. ** There are three origins of environmental quality standards: (1) The Grade Ⅱ standard in Environmental quality standard for soils (GB 15618–1995) [29], which specifies the restriction values to protect agricultural production and maintain human health for eight kinds of heavy metal and metalloids including arsenic, lead and chromium; (2) Technical regulations on the assessment of soil pollution status in China [30], where we found the restriction value for manganese. (These first two kinds of standard values are equivalent to preliminary remediation goal in America or soil guideline values in British [31].) (3) The paper Contribution for the Derivation of a Soil Screening Value (SSV) for Uranium, Using a Natural Reference Soil [32], which offered a reference restriction value for uranium. We could not find any intervention value of U, so we had to adopt this soil screening value.
The results of target element contaminations by means of contamination factors.
| Target Element | Contamination Percentage by Means of Contamination Factor (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slightly Polluted 1 < | Moderately Polluted 2 < | Strongly Polluted | ||||
| U | 1.46 | 85.36 | 13.18 | 7.80 * | 2.93 * | 2.44 * |
| Mn | 70.24 | 28.29 | 1.47 | 0.98 | 0 | 0.49 |
| As | 27.81 | 70.24 | 1.95 | 1.46 | 0 | 0.49 |
| Pb | 39.51 | 58.54 | 1.95 | 1.95 | 0 | 0 |
| Cr | 32.68 | 67.32 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Note: Strictly, these values with * could not be named as polluted percentages before environmental risk evaluation, since we adopted the soil screening value as the baseline value to calculate U’s CF2.
Figure 2The distribution of the 27 samples whose U’s CF2 > 1.
Acid-soluble fraction (F1), %F1 and uranium’s RAC of the 27 samples.
| Soil Sample | Acid-Soluble Fraction (F1) (mg/Kg) | Total U (mg/Kg) | Percentage of the total U (% F1) | Risk Assessment Code (RAC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No.001 | 13.30 | 33.15 | 40.13 | high risk |
| No.002 | 9.35 | 30.69 | 30.47 | high risk |
| No.003 | 13.71 | 40.81 | 33.59 | high risk |
| No.004 | 8.33 | 17.72 | 46.99 | high risk |
| No.011 | 14.42 | 34.24 | 42.11 | high risk |
| No.021 | 4.78 | 19.25 | 24.85 | medium risk |
| No.023 | 6.03 | 17.20 | 35.04 | high risk |
| No.033 | 15.46 | 41.14 | 37.59 | high risk |
| No.035 | 55.29 | 102.68 | 53.85 | very high risk |
| No.050 | 7.73 | 20.03 | 38.61 | high risk |
| No.051 | 33.51 | 62.37 | 53.72 | very high risk |
| No.052 | 235.39 | 726.96 | 32.38 | high risk |
| No.060 | 5.39 | 15.87 | 33.95 | high risk |
| No.068 | 13.17 | 34.62 | 38.04 | high risk |
| No.070 | 5.41 | 15.94 | 33.94 | high risk |
| No.071 | 6.38 | 24.49 | 26.05 | medium risk |
| No.074 | 17.65 | 33.92 | 52.03 | very high risk |
| No.083 | 2.41 | 20.45 | 11.77 | medium risk |
| No.086 | 40.00 | 120.52 | 33.19 | high risk |
| No.087 | 19.17 | 60.21 | 31.85 | high risk |
| No.098 | 6.49 | 16.37 | 39.62 | high risk |
| No.106 | 7.20 | 15.77 | 45.66 | high risk |
| No.115 | 6.93 | 18.37 | 37.73 | high risk |
| No.131 | 9.49 | 19.21 | 49.39 | high risk |
| No.141 | 7.28 | 15.68 | 46.44 | high risk |
| No.168 | 8.43 | 17.12 | 49.22 | high risk |
| No.201 | 4.19 | 22.12 | 18.96 | medium risk |
Figure 3The distribution of the 27 samples’ RAC.
Descriptive statistical summary of soil pollution comprehensive assessments.
| Statistical Quantity | X | Y | RPE | DDMB | CPI | CPI > 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | 0.19 | 3.28 | 0.74 | 1.04 | 0.82 | 2.93 |
| Standard deviation | 0.49 | 1.10 | 0.07 | 0.12 | 1.05 | 1.37 |
| Maximum | 3 | 5 | 1.10 | 1.68 | 7.38 | 7.38 |
| Minimum | 0 | 1 | 0.43 | 0.64 | 0.09 | 1.86 |
| Skewness | 3.18 | −0.31 | 1.47 | 1.90 | 3.50 | 2.53 |
| Kurtosis | 11.83 | −0.50 | 10.12 | 10.20 | 15.66 | 5.98 |
Classification standards of the Comprehensive Pollution Index (CPI).
| X | Y | CPI | Comprehensive Pollution Assessments | Number of Sampling Points and the Corresponding Percent | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | Background state | 0 | 0 |
| 0 | ≥1 | 0 < CPI < 1 | Unpolluted but invaded and accumulated | 174 | 84.9% |
| ≥1 | ≥1 | 1 ≤ CPI < 2 | Slightly polluted | 1 | 0.5% |
| 2 ≤ CPI < 3 | Moderately polluted | 24 | 11.7% | ||
| CPI ≥ 3 | Strongly polluted | 6 | 2.9% | ||
Note: The comprehensive pollution assessment standard was mainly from these two references [24,35], and refined by the pollution degree by the authors, which had been classified as polluted generally when CPI ≥ 1.
Figure 4The distribution of the 31 samples whose CPI ≥ 1.
Figure 5The continuous distribution of U’s CF2.
Figure 6The continuous distribution of CPI.
The areas and percent of uranium pollution degree and comprehensive pollution degree.
| Uranium Pollution Degree | Area (km2) | Percent (%) | Comprehensive Pollution Degree | Area (km2) | Percent (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unpolluted | 38.11 | 92.38 | Unpolluted | 35.62 | 86.34 |
| Slightly polluted | 2.02 | 4.91 | Slightly polluted | 4.90 | 11.87 |
| Moderately polluted | 0.01 | 0.04 | Moderately polluted | 0.60 | 1.46 |
| Strongly polluted | 1.11 | 2.67 | Strongly polluted | 0.13 | 0.33 |
| ∑ | 41.25 | 100 | ∑ | 41.25 | 100 |
Theoretical models and parameters of the variogram of CF2 of U and CPI.
| Pollution Index | Theoretical Model | Nugget (C0) | Sill (C0 + C) | Nugget to Sill Ratio [C0/(C0 + C)] | Range (m) | RSS | r2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gaussian | 0.082 | 1.015 | 8.08% | 328 | 0.019 | 0.306 | |
| CPI | Exponential | 0.178 | 1.138 | 84.4% | 132 | 0.377 | 0.224 |
Figure 7Digital Elevation Model of the study area.