The effect of liming on heavy metal concentrations in wheat, carrots and spinach grown on previously sludge-applied soils
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- crops and-soils
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 127 (3) , 289-294
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600078448
Abstract
SUMMARY Liming is often recommended to minimize the plant uptake of potentially toxic elements from sludgeamended soils. In outdoor experiments conducted during 1989–91 in a rural location, near Brentwood (UK), wheat, carrots and spinach were grown on soils from a wide range of sites previously amended with heavy applications of sewage sludge. The objective of these studies was to examine the effect of liming on the accumulation of sludge-borne metals in the crop plants. The results showed that liming the soils to pH 7 prior to sowing significantly reduced metal concentrations in carrots and spinach, although the reduction appeared to be greater for Cd, Ni and Zn than for Cu and Pb. The wheat crop was grown on soils which had been limed 2 years previously, and the average pH of these soils was 6·5 compared to a pH value of 5·95 in the unlimed soils. This comparatively small pH difference between limed and unlimed soils (6·50–5·95) generally had little influence on metal contents in wheat. These results suggested that maintaining the soil at pH 7 is better than pH 6·5 for minimizing the accumulation of potentially toxic elements from soils which have received relatively high levels of sludge application over many years. The data for winter wheat suggested either that metal uptake into the grain was not sensitive to differences in soil pH or that a relatively small residual effect of past liming was not high enough to reduce metal uptake.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of soil pH on availability to crops of metals in sewage sludge-treated soils. II. Cadmium uptake by crops and implications for human dietary intakeEnvironmental Pollution, 1994
- Effects of time and temperature on the bioavailability of Cd and Pb from sludge‐amended soilsEuropean Journal of Soil Science, 1993
- The uptake and distribution of heavy metals by spring wheatWater, Air, & Soil Pollution, 1991
- The bioavailability of cadmium to lettuce and cabbage in soils previously treated with sewage sludgesPlant and Soil, 1991
- The influence of pH, soil type and time on adsorbtion and uptake by plants of Cd added to the soilWater, Air, & Soil Pollution, 1989
- METAL MOVEMENT IN SLUDGE-AMENDED SOILSSoil Science, 1987
- EFFECTS OF SOIL TYPE, LIMING, AND SLUDGE APPLICATION ON ZINC AND CADMIUM AVAILABILITY TO SWISS CHARD1Soil Science, 1985
- Silage Corn Uptake of Sludge‐Applied Zinc and Cadmium as Affected by Soil pHJournal of Environmental Quality, 1983
- Sweet Corn Response to Application of Three Sewage SludgesJournal of Environmental Quality, 1982
- An evaluation of the performance of an inductively coupled plasma source spectrometer for the determination of the major and trace constituents of silicate rocks and mineralsMineralogical Magazine, 1980