Abstract
Lake Taihu is one of the most contaminated lakes in China. Surface sediment data show that the northern area of the Lake has the worst heavy metals pollution, and high heavy metal concentrations were attributed to discharge of untreated and partially treated industrial waste water from cities to the north of the lake. To study geochemical features and pollution history of heavy metals, total content and chemical fractionations of Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, and Zn were analyzed for core sediments from western Lake Taihu using the speciation extraction procedure, proposed by the Commission of the European Communities Bureau of Reference (BCR), together with grain size and organic carbon measurements. Results show that sediments are composed of organic-poor clayey-fine silts for Cores MS and DLS, and have similar geochemical features shown by heavy metals. Cu, Fe, Ni, and Zn mainly are associated with the residue fraction, Mn is concentrated in the exchangeable-carbonate and residue fractions, and Pb is concentrated in the Fe-Mn oxide fraction and organic-sulfide fraction. The fractions of Ni, Pb, and Zn bound to Fe-Mn oxide show significant correlations with Mn from the Fe-Mn oxide fraction, and the organic-sulfide fractions of Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb, and Zn are correlated with TOC. The increase of Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn content and percentage of extractable fractions in the upper layers of the sediments are correlated with anthropogenic input of heavy metals due to rapid industrial development. This coincides with rapid economic development in the Taihu basin since late 1970s. Heavy metals in the surface sediments have certain potential biological toxicity as shown by the higher SEM/AVS ratio.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Abraham, J., 1998. Spatial distribution of major and trace elements in shallow reservoir sediments: an example from Lake Waco, Texas. Environmental Geology 36: 349–363.
Alvarez, M., M. E. Malla & D. A. Batistoni, 2001. Comparative assessment of two sequential chemical extraction schemes for the fractionation of cadmium, chromium, lead and zinc in surface coastal sediments. Fresenius Journal of Analytical Chemistry 369: 81–90.
Covelli, S. & G. Fontolan, 1997. Application of a normalization procedure in determining regional geochemical baselines. Environmental Geology 30: 34–45.
Dai, X. & C. Sun, 2001. The characteristics of heavy metals distribution and pollution in sediment from Lake Taihu. Shanghai Environmental Sciences 20: 71–74 (in Chinese).
Edward, R., 1998. Predicting the toxicity of sediment-associated trace metals with SEM:AVS and dry weight-normalized concentrations: A critical comparison. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 17: 972–974.
Föstner, U. & G. T. W. Wittmann, 1988, Metal Pollution in the Aquatic Environment. China Ocean Press, Beijing (Chinese translation edition translated by Wang, Z. & Z. Yao).
Ge, J., 1992. Lost assessment of Lake Taihu caused by water pollution. Environmental Science 2: 68–72 (in Chinese).
Hlavay, J. & K. Polyák, 2002. Investigation on the pollution sources of bottom sediments in the Lake Balaton. Microchemical Journal 73: 65–78.
Huang, Y., C. Fan, P. Pu, J. Jiang & Q. Dai, 2001. The Water Environment and Pollution Control of Lake Taihu. The Science Press, Beijing (Chinese).
Li, J., J. Song & X. Wang, 2004. Acid volatile sulfides and simultaneous extracted metals in the surficial sediments of Wuli Lake, Lake Taihu, Journal of Lake Sciences 16: 77–80 (in Chinese).
Li, X., Z. Shen, W. H. Wai Onyx & Y. Li., 2001. Chemical forms of Pb, Zn and Cu in the sediment profiles of the Pearl River Estuary. Marine Pollution Bulletin 42: 215–223.
Liu, E., J. Shen & Y. Zhu, 2005. Geochemical Records and Comparative Study of the Sediments in the stern Lake Taihu. Scientia Geographica Sinica 25: 102–107 (in Chinese).
Liu, Y., L. Cao, Z. Li, H. Wang, T. Chu & J. Zhang, 1984. Element Geochemistry. The Science Press, Beijng (in Chinese).
Luoma, S. N., 1983. Bioavailability of trace metals to aquatic organisms-a review: Science of the Total Environment 28: 1–22.
Lu, Y., 1998. The agricultural non-point pollution in Taihu Basin and sustainable development. Environmental Science Trends 2: 1–4 (in Chinese).
Oakley, S. M., P. O. Nelson & K. L. Williamson, 1981. Model of trace-metal portioning in marine sediments: Environmental Science and Technology 15: 474–480.
Qin, B. Q., P. Z. Xu, Q. L. Wu, L.C. Luo & Y. L. Zhang, 2007. Environmental issues of Lake Taihu, China. Hydrobiologia 581: 3–14.
Qu, W., M. Dickman & S. Wang, 2001. Multivariate analysis of heavy metal and nutrient concentrations in sediments of Lake Taihu, China. Hydrobiologia 450: 83–89.
Quevauviller, Ph., G. Rauret, J. F. López-Sánchez, R. Rubio, A. Ure & H. Muntau, 1997. Certification of trace metal extractable contents in a sediment reference material (CRM 601) following a three-step sequential extraction procedure. Science of the Total Environment 205: 223–234.
Rosales-Hoza, L., A. B. Cundyb & J. L. Bahena-Manjarrez, 2003. Heavy metals in sediment cores from a tropical estuary affected by anthropogenic discharges: Coatzacoalcos estuary, Mexico. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 58: 117–126.
Rose, N. L., J. F. Boyle, Y. Du, C. Yi, X. Dai, P. G. Appleby, H. Bennion, S. Cai & L. Yu, 2004. Sedimentary evidence for changes in the pollution status of Taihu in the Jiangsu region of eastern China. Journal of Paleolimnology 32: 41–51.
Rubio, B., M. A. Nombela & F. Vilas, 2000. Geochemistry of major and trace elements in sediments of the Ria de Vigo (NW Spain): An assessment of metal pollution. Marine Pollution Bulletin 40: 968–980.
Saeki, K., M. Okazaki & S. Matsumoto, 1993. The chemical phase changes in heavy metals with drying and oxidation of the lake sediments. Water Research 27: 1243–1251.
Soto-Jiménez, M. F. & F. Páez-Osuna, 2001. Distribution and Normalization of Heavy Metal Concentrations in Mangrove and Lagoonal Sediments from Mazatlán Harbor (SE Gulf of California). Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 53: 259–274.
Sun, S. & Y. Huang, 1993. Lake Taihu. China Ocean Press, Beijing (in Chinese).
Tack, F. M., O. W. J. J. Callewaert & M. G. Verloo, 1996. Metal solubility as a function of pH in a contaminated dredged sediment affected by oxidation. Environmental Pollution 91: 199–208.
Tokalioğlu, S., S. Kartal & E. Latif, 2000. Determination of heavy metals and their speciation in lake sediments by flame atomic absorption spectrometry after a four-stage sequential extraction procedure. Analytica Chimica Acta 413: 33–40.
Tüzen, M., 2003. Determination of trace metals in the River Yesilşrmak sediments in Toka, Turkey using sequential extraction procedure. Microchemical Journal 74: 105–110.
Wang, H., C. Wang & Z. Wang, 2002. Speciations of heavy metals in surface sediment of Lake Taihu. Environmental Chemistry 21: 430–435 (in Chinese).
Yuan, X., J. Chen, J. Ji, Y. Tao & W. Qu, 2002b. Compositions and the formative conditions of sediments in Lake Taihu, Eastern China. Journal of Nanjing University (Nature Sciences) 38: 756–765 (in Chinese).
Yuan, X., J. Chen, J. Ji, Y. Tao & R. Wang, 2002a. Characteristics and environmental changes of pollution elements in Taihu sediments and soils near the lake. Acta Sedimentologica Sinica 20: 427–434 (in Chinese).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2007 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Shen, J., Liu, E., Zhu, Y., Hu, S., Qu, W. (2007). Distribution and chemical fractionation of heavy metals in recent sediments from Lake Taihu, China. In: Qin, B., Liu, Z., Havens, K. (eds) Eutrophication of Shallow Lakes with Special Reference to Lake Taihu, China. Developments in Hydrobiology, vol 194. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6158-5_16
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6158-5_16
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-6157-8
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-6158-5
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)