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Impact of sewage sludge spreading on heavy metal speciation in tropical soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean).
Chemosphere. 2006 Oct; 65(2):286-93.C

Abstract

This study was designed to evaluate the impact of sewage sludge spreading on tropical soilborne heavy metal speciation. Sludgeborne heavy metal speciation was also assessed, and the potential mobility of the elements was classified as follows: Zn>Ni>>Cu approximately Cr. Two sequential extraction procedures were applied to study Cr, Cu, Ni and Zn speciation in control soils and sludge-amended soils. We demonstrated that sewage sludge spreading over a 2-year period did not have an impact on soilborne heavy metal concentrations but affected speciation of the most mobile fractions of Ni and Zn. Both protocols were consistent for the organic matter fractions, with an increase in Cu, Zn and Cr concentrations in the amended soil as compared to the control soil. In addition, we highlighted that the two protocols characterized different pools of organic matter and that organic compounds remained in the solid matrix after extraction. With respect to the reducible fraction, completely opposite results were obtained with the two protocols and the solid residue study revealed that the two schemes were ineffective in characterizing iron and manganese fractions.

Authors+Show Affiliations

CIRAD, Environmental Risks of Recycling Research Unit, Station de La Bretagne, BP 20, Saint-Denis Messagerie Cedex 9, La Réunion F-97408, France. emmanuel.doelsch@cirad.frNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16643982

Citation

Doelsch, Emmanuel, et al. "Impact of Sewage Sludge Spreading On Heavy Metal Speciation in Tropical Soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean)." Chemosphere, vol. 65, no. 2, 2006, pp. 286-93.
Doelsch E, Deroche B, Van de Kerchove V. Impact of sewage sludge spreading on heavy metal speciation in tropical soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean). Chemosphere. 2006;65(2):286-93.
Doelsch, E., Deroche, B., & Van de Kerchove, V. (2006). Impact of sewage sludge spreading on heavy metal speciation in tropical soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean). Chemosphere, 65(2), 286-93.
Doelsch E, Deroche B, Van de Kerchove V. Impact of Sewage Sludge Spreading On Heavy Metal Speciation in Tropical Soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean). Chemosphere. 2006;65(2):286-93. PubMed PMID: 16643982.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Impact of sewage sludge spreading on heavy metal speciation in tropical soils (Réunion, Indian Ocean). AU - Doelsch,Emmanuel, AU - Deroche,Béatrice, AU - Van de Kerchove,Virginie, Y1 - 2006/04/27/ PY - 2005/11/22/received PY - 2006/02/20/revised PY - 2006/02/21/accepted PY - 2006/4/29/pubmed PY - 2006/12/9/medline PY - 2006/4/29/entrez SP - 286 EP - 93 JF - Chemosphere JO - Chemosphere VL - 65 IS - 2 N2 - This study was designed to evaluate the impact of sewage sludge spreading on tropical soilborne heavy metal speciation. Sludgeborne heavy metal speciation was also assessed, and the potential mobility of the elements was classified as follows: Zn>Ni>>Cu approximately Cr. Two sequential extraction procedures were applied to study Cr, Cu, Ni and Zn speciation in control soils and sludge-amended soils. We demonstrated that sewage sludge spreading over a 2-year period did not have an impact on soilborne heavy metal concentrations but affected speciation of the most mobile fractions of Ni and Zn. Both protocols were consistent for the organic matter fractions, with an increase in Cu, Zn and Cr concentrations in the amended soil as compared to the control soil. In addition, we highlighted that the two protocols characterized different pools of organic matter and that organic compounds remained in the solid matrix after extraction. With respect to the reducible fraction, completely opposite results were obtained with the two protocols and the solid residue study revealed that the two schemes were ineffective in characterizing iron and manganese fractions. SN - 0045-6535 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16643982/Impact_of_sewage_sludge_spreading_on_heavy_metal_speciation_in_tropical_soils__Réunion_Indian_Ocean__ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -