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Assessment of Hazardous and Essential Elements in a Food Crop Irrigated with Municipal Sewage Water: Risk Appraisal for Public Health
Authors:Zafar Iqbal Khan  Asia Firdos  Kafeel Ahmad  Muhammad Ashraf  Zahara Bibi  Nudrat Aisha Akram
Institution:1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Sargodha, Sargodha, Pakistan;2. Pakistan Science Foundation, Islamabad, Pakistan;3. Department of Botany and Microbiology, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia;4. Department of Botany, Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan
Abstract:To assess the impact of sewage water on metal accretion in selected diverse varieties of wheat (i.e., Lasani-2008, ARRI-10, Faisalabad-83, Punjab-85, Aas-2010, and Sehar-2006), their seeds were sown in pots containing soil. The results showed that the concentration of heavy metals in grains from the wheat plants supplied with sewage water was considerably higher than the plants supplied with canal irrigation water (control). In canal water irrigated wheat grains the metal concentrations (mg/kg) ranged from 2.20–3.5 for Cu, 12.50–32.4 for Zn, 22.45–35.22 for Mn, 0.05–0.15 for Pb, 0.012–0.029 for Cd, 2.5–5.3 for Ni, 18.16–29.63 for Fe, and 0.90–3.64 for Cr in different wheat varieties, whereas the wheat grains raised from sewage water, had metal concentrations (mg/kg): 3.8–5.30 for Cu, 29.60–40.50 for Zn, 32.9–50.40 for Mn, 1.14–7.50 for Pb, 0.26–0.42 for Cd, 3.90–7.55 for Ni, 32.21–40.35 for Fe, and 2.88–7.84 for Cr. Since these metals bioaccumulate in wheat grains with unremitting use of metal-enriched wastewater, care has to be taken for irrigating wheat plants with household wastewater for a longer time, particularly in those soils where this crop is grown regularly.
Keywords:heavy metals  sewage water  wheat  maximum tolerable limits
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