1. Implications for food safety of the uptake by tomato of 25 trace-elements from a phosphogypsum amended soil from SW Spain.
- Author
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Enamorado S, Abril JM, Delgado A, Más JL, Polvillo O, and Quintero JM
- Subjects
- Calcium Sulfate chemistry, Environmental Monitoring, Food Safety, Fruit drug effects, Fruit metabolism, Solanum lycopersicum metabolism, Metalloids analysis, Metalloids chemistry, Metals analysis, Metals chemistry, Phosphorus chemistry, Plant Shoots drug effects, Plant Shoots metabolism, Soil Pollutants analysis, Soil Pollutants chemistry, Calcium Sulfate pharmacology, Solanum lycopersicum drug effects, Metalloids metabolism, Metals metabolism, Phosphorus pharmacology, Soil Pollutants metabolism
- Abstract
Phosphogypsum (PG) has been usually applied as Ca-amendment to reclaim sodic soils such as those in the marshland area of Lebrija (SW Spain). This work aimed at the effects of PG amendments on the uptake of trace-elements by tomato and its implications for food safety. A completely randomized experiment was performed using a representative soil from Lebrija in a greenhouse involving six replicates and four PG treatments equivalent to 0, 20, 60, and 200 Mg ha(-1). Soil-to-plant transfer factors (TFs) were determined for Be, B, Al, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Se, Sr, Mo, Ag, Cd, Sb, Cs, Ba, Tl, Pb, Th and U. The highest TF in shoots was observed for Cd (4.0; 1.5 in fruits), its concentration being increased with increasing PG doses due to its content in this metal (2.1 mg Cd kg(-1)PG). Phosphogypsum applying decreased the concentrations of Mn, Co and Cu in shoots; and of B, Cu, Sb, Cs, Ba, Tl and Th in fruits, however enhanced the accumulation of Se in fruits. Although Cd concentrations in tomato were below the maximum allowed levels in control pots (0 Mg PG ha(-1)), PG amendments above 60 Mg ha(-1) exceeded such limits., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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