Soil extraction techniques to measure the status of available micronutrients for plants are important in the diagnosis of deficiency or toxicity. Mehlich 3 (M3), EDTA (pH=8.2), DTPA-TEA, and Soltanpour and Schwab (SS) solutions were confronted for their ability to extract simultaneously copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), and iron (Fe). Argentinean soils from different taxonomic orders with widely varying properties were investigated. The values obtained showed that DTPA-TEA and SS solutions extracted similar amounts of Zn, Fe, and Mn, while EDTA dissolved comparatively higher amounts of Fe and Mn. Mehlich 3 yielded the highest extractions for the four micronutrients. Soil pH not only affected the extraction of Mn by DTPA-TEA, SS, and EDTA extractions, but also the extraction of Fe by EDTA. The organic carbon affected the determination of Fe and Zn in all cases. The correlations of the different tests for Cu, Zn, Mn, and Fe were significant. The results suggest that for the determination of the bioavailable status of micronutrients, any of the studied tests could be applied using the soil edaphic properties as factors to improve the correlations between them and standardize the methods.
This study provides geochemical partitioning, potential bioavailability, and enrichment of Cd, Cu, Pb, and Zn in bottom sediments collected from the Matanza-Riachuelo River and its main tributary streams. A modified Tessier sequential extraction procedure, complemented with acid volatile sulfide (AVS) and simultaneous extracted metals (SEM) measurements, was applied to determine the partitioning of metals into four fractions (metals bound to amorphous sulfide, carbonate, and exchangeable), bound to Fe/Mn oxides (reducible), bound to organic matter/sulfide (oxidizable) and residual. Spatial and vertical distributions of metals were studied. The core sediments show a decreasing concentration of metals with depth. In top sediments, non-residual Cu was mainly associated with oxidizable phase, whereas Pb, Cd, and Zn were mainly associated with amorphous sulfide. Pb exhibited the highest enrichment in all sites. The ratio AVS/SEM was greater than one at sediment sections close to the water column, indicating that metals extracted with hydrochloric acid were mainly associated with the amorphous sulfide. The strong influence of amorphous sulfide in the retention of Cd, Pb, and Zn in anoxic sediments of Matanza-Riachuelo river system suggests that dredging and aeration could lead to the remobilization of metals from sediments to the water column, hence making the metals more available to the biota.
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