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Contamination of soils with heavy metals and metalloids and its ecological hazard (analytic review)

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Abstract

According to the present-day ecotoxicologic data, hazardous heavy metals/metalloids form the following sequence in the soil: Se > Tl > Sb > Cd > V > Hg > Ni > Cu > Cr > As > Ba. This sequence differs from the well-known series of the hazardous heavy elements, in which the danger of Pb and Zn is exaggerated, whereas that of V, Sb, and Ba, is underestimated. Tl also should be included in the list of hazardous elements in the soil. At present, the stress is made on the investigation of heavy metals/metalloids in agricultural soils rather than in urban soils, as the former produce contaminated products poisoning both animals and humans. The main sources of soil contamination with heavy metals are the following: aerial deposition from stationary and moving sources; hydrogenic contamination from the industrial sewage discharging into water bodies; sewage sediments; organic and mineral fertilizers and chemicals for plant protection, tailing dumps of ash, slag, ores, and sludge. In addition to the impact on plants and groundwater, heavy metals/metalloids exert a negative effect on the soil proper. Soil microorganisms appear to be very sensitive to the influence of heavy elements.

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Correspondence to Yu. N. Vodyanitskii.

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Original Russian Text © Yu.N. Vodyanitskii, 2013, published in Pochvovedenie, 2013, No. 7, pp. 872–881.

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Vodyanitskii, Y.N. Contamination of soils with heavy metals and metalloids and its ecological hazard (analytic review). Eurasian Soil Sc. 46, 793–801 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1134/S1064229313050153

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