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Metal accumulation risks in regularly flooded and non-flooded parts of floodplains of the River Rhine: Extractability and exposure through the food chain
Authors:S Wijnhoven  G Van Der Velde  R S E W Leuven  H J P Eijsackers  A J M Smits
Institution:  a Centre for Sustainable Management of Resources (CSMR), Institute for Science, Innovation and Society (ISIS), Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, GL, The Netherlands b Netherlands Centre for River Studies (NCR), Delft, MH, The Netherlands c Department of Animal Ecology and Ecophysiology, Institute for Wetland and Water Research (IWWR), Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, GL, The Netherlands d Department of Environmental Science, Institute for Wetland and Water Research (IWWR), Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, GL, The Netherlands e Institute of Ecological Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, HV, The Netherlands f Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, HB, The Netherlands g Water Management and Sustainability, Faculty of Social Sciences, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, DR, The Netherlands
Abstract:Ecotoxicological risks of sediment contamination in floodplains are supposed to be highest in the regularly flooded parts. Therefore, in risk assessments, the non-flooded parts are neglected or considered to be reference areas. We investigated the metal extractability and levels in important food sources for vertebrates, viz. grass shoots and earthworms, in flooded as well as non-flooded parts and compared these with total metal concentrations. A comparison of these areas in the moderately polluted 'Afferdensche en Deestsche Waarden' floodplains along the River Rhine showed that total Zn, Pb, and Cd concentrations were highest in the regularly flooded parts. However, CaCl2-extractable Zn concentrations were highest in non-flooded areas, and those of Pb and Cd were equal in both areas. Total Cu concentrations were not significantly different between the two areas, but CaCl2-extractable Cu concentrations were highest in the regularly flooded areas. The metal concentrations in grass shoots of non-flooded areas were equal to (Zn, Cu, Cd) or higher than (Pb) those in regularly flooded areas. Zn concentrations in earthworms in regularly flooded areas were higher, but concentrations of Cu, Pb, and Cd were not. Ecotoxicological risk assessments require analysis of the total and potentially bioavailable metal concentrations in soils as well as concentrations in biota. This study shows that the less contaminated non-flooded areas in moderately polluted floodplains cannot be neglected in metal accumulation studies and cannot be used as pristine reference areas.
Keywords:Contaminated floodplains  Metal accumulation  Non-flooded areas  Food web  Bioavailability  Risk assessment
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