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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Spatial distribution and temporal variability of arsenic in irrigated rice fields in Bangladesh. 2. Paddy soil

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Dittmar J, Voegelin A, Roberts LC, Hug SJ, Saha GC, Ali MA, Badruzzaman ABM, Kretzschmar R
2007
Environmental Science & Technology. 41 (17): 5967-5972

Arsenic-rich groundwater from shallow tube wells is widely used for the irrigation of boro rice in Bangladesh and West Bengal. In the long term this may lead to the accumulation of As in paddy soils and potentially have adverse effects on rice yield and quality. In the companion article in this issue, we have shown that As input into paddy fields with irrigation water is laterally heterogeneous. To assess the potential for As accumulation in soil, we investigated the lateral and vertical distribution of As in rice field soils near Sreenagar (Munshiganj, Bangladesh) and its changes over a 1 year cycle of irrigation and monsoon flooding. At the study site, 18 paddy fields are irrigated with water from a shallow tube well containing 397 +/- 7 microg L(-1) As. The analysis of soil samples collected before irrigation in December 2004 showed that soil As concentrations in paddy fields did not depend on the length of the irrigation channel between well and field inlet. Within individual fields, however, soil As contents decreased with increasing distance to the water inlet, leading to highly variable topsoil As contents (11-35 mg kg(-1), 0-10 cm). Soil As contents after irrigation (May 2005) showed that most As input occurred close to the water inlet and that most As was retained in the top few centimeters of soil. After monsoon flooding (December 2005), topsoil As contents were again close to levels measured before irrigation. Thus, As input during irrigation was at least partly counteracted by As mobilization during monsoon flooding. However, the persisting lateral As distribution suggests net arsenic accumulation over the past 15 years. More pronounced As accumulation may occur in regions with several rice crops per year, less intense monsoon flooding, or different irrigation schemes. The high lateral and vertical heterogeneity of soil As contents must be taken into account in future studies related to As accumulation in paddy soils and potential As transfer into rice.

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Resource Description

    Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Quality, Water Quality
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Quality, Water Quality: Flood
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Quality, Water Quality: Crop/Plant Chemical, Other Food Quality, Specify
      • Crop/Plant Chemical, Other Food Quality, Specify: Arsenic
      Type of food contamination (other)
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Quality, Water Quality: Marine/Freshwater Chemical, Other Water Quality, Specify
      • Marine/Freshwater Chemical, Other Water Quality, Specify: Arsenic
      Water quality issue (other)
    Freshwater, Tropical, Other Geographic Feature, Specify
    • Freshwater, Tropical, Other Geographic Feature, Specify: Subtropical
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Asia
    Cancer
    Research Article
    Adaptation
    • Adaptation: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Vulnerability Assessment
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