Mercury, cadmium and lead biogeochemistry in the soil-plant-insect system in huludao city

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Abstract

Mercury, cadmium, and lead concentrations of ashed plants and insects samples were investigated and compared with those of soil to reveal their biogeochemical processes along food chains in Huludao City, Liaoning Province, China. Concentration factors of each fragments of the soil-plant-the herbivorous insect-the carnivorous insect food chain were 0.18, 6.57, and 7.88 for mercury; 6.82, 2.01, and 0.48 for cadmium; 1.47, 2.24, and 0.57 for lead, respectively. On the whole, mercury was the most largely biomagnified, but cadmium and lead were not greatly accumulated in the carnivorous insects as expected when the food chain extended to the secondary consumers. Results indicated that concentration factors depended on metals and insects species of food chains. © 2009 The Author(s).

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Zhang, Z. S., Lu, X. G., Wang, Q. C., & Zheng, D. M. (2009). Mercury, cadmium and lead biogeochemistry in the soil-plant-insect system in huludao city. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 83(2), 255–259. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00128-009-9688-6

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