Routine soil testing to monitor heavy metals and boron

Authors

  • Cleide Aparecida de Abreu Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento em Solos e Recursos Ambientais
  • Bernardo van Raij Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento em Solos e Recursos Ambientais
  • Mônica Ferreira de Abreu Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento em Solos e Recursos Ambientais
  • Antonio Paz González Universidade A Coruña.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162005000600009

Keywords:

soil analyses, micronutrients, heavy metals, deficiency, toxicity, interpretation limits

Abstract

Microelements are an important issue in agriculture, due to their need as micronutrients for plants and also to the possibility of the build-up of toxic levels for plants and animals. Five micronutrients (B, Cu, Fe, Mn, and Zn) are routinely determined in soil analysis for advisory purposes. Other four elements (Cd, Cr, Pb, and Ni) are considered environmentally important heavy metals in farmland soils. Thus high contents of these metals in cropland might go eventually unnoticed. In this paper we present an approach that can be used to monitor the contents of the nine elements in farmland soils using advisory soil testing. A total of 13,416 soil samples from 21 Brazilian states, 58% of them from the state of São Paulo, sent by farmers were analyzed. Boron was determined by hot water extraction and the other metals were determined by DTPA (pH 7.3) extraction. The ranges of content, given in mg dm-3 soil, were the following: B, 0.01-10.6; Cu, 0.1-56.2; Fe, 0.5-476; Mn, 1-325; Zn, 1-453; Cd, 0.00-3.43, Cr, 0.00-42.9; Ni, 0.00-65.1; Pb, 0.00-63.9. The respective average values for São Paulo were: B-0.32; Cu-2.5; Fe-36; Mn-16; Zn-4.8; Cd-0.02; Cr-0.03; Ni-0.18; Pb-0.85. For other states the results are in the same ranges. The higher values are indicative of anthropogenic inputs, either due to excess application of fertilizers or to industrial or mining activities. The conclusion is that massive chemical analysis of farmland soil samples could serve as a database for indicating potential micronutrient deficiency and excesses or heavy metal buil-up in croplands, allowing preventive actions to be taken.

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Published

2005-12-01

Issue

Section

Soils and Plant Nutrition

How to Cite

Routine soil testing to monitor heavy metals and boron . (2005). Scientia Agricola, 62(6), 564-571. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162005000600009