The intake of lead and associated metals by sheep grazing mining-contaminated floodplain pastures in mid-Wales, UK: I. Soil ingestion, soil–metal partitioning and potential availability to pasture herbage and livestock

K. M. Smith, Peter W. Abrahams, M. P. Dagleish, Joerg Anton Steigmajer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper first evaluates the relative importance of the soil–plant–animal and soil–animal pathways of Zn, Cu and (especially) Pb investigated over a 15-month study period at 12 floodplain sites located within and downstream of the mineralised and historic mining area of mid-Wales, and secondly considers the implications of a sequential extraction procedure (SEP) undertaken on soils of varying particle size sampled from the study locations. Generally, very good agreement was found between the chemical partitioning of the three metals for each of the physical soil fractions subjected to the SEP. The availability of Pb to pasture vegetation, especially at the contaminated sites, is indicated with its associations with the more soluble (i.e. exchangeable and Fe/Mn oxide) soil phases, yet soil and/or plant barriers effectively restrict above-ground herbage concentrations of this metal. Consequently, with sheep ingesting soil at rates varying according to season from 0.1% to 44% or more of dry matter intake, the soil–animal pathway accounts for the majority of Pb consumption through most of the year, and at moderately and highly contaminated sites significant quantities of relatively soluble soil–Pb can be ingested at rates exceeding safety threshold limits
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3731-3739
Number of pages9
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume407
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Jun 2009

Keywords

  • Fluvial contamination
  • Lead
  • Sequential extraction procedure
  • Sheep
  • Soil ingestion
  • Wales

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