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Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.

The potential impact of acidic precipitation on the environmental mobility of the metalloids arsenic (As) and selenium (Se) has not been given much attention and is poorly understood. As with other elements, the interest here is the potential effect of environmental acidification on environmental be...

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Autor principal: Mushak, P
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1985
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4076075
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author Mushak, P
author_facet Mushak, P
author_sort Mushak, P
collection PubMed
description The potential impact of acidic precipitation on the environmental mobility of the metalloids arsenic (As) and selenium (Se) has not been given much attention and is poorly understood. As with other elements, the interest here is the potential effect of environmental acidification on environmental behavior in ways that are relevant to human exposure to these metalloids. Available information on acid precipitation and the environmental behavior of these metalloids do, however, permit some preliminary conclusions to be drawn. Both As and Se appear to be mobilized from household plumbing into tap water by the corrosive action of soft, mildly acidic water, while surface water catchment systems in areas impacted by acidic deposition may contain elevated soluble As levels. Acidification of aquatic ecosystems that are drinking water sources may pose the prospect of enhanced release of As from sediment to water as well as reduction in water levels of Se. Acidification of ground waters, where As appears to be especially mobile, is of particular concern in this regard. The potential impact of acidic deposition on As and Se in soils cannot readily be assessed with respect to human exposure, but it would appear that the behavior of these metalloids in poorly buffered, poorly immobilizing soils, e.g., sandy soils of low metal hydrous oxide content, would be most affected. The effect is opposite for the two elements; lowered pH would appear to enhance As mobility and to reduce Se availability. Altered acidity of both soil and aquatic systems poses a risk for altered biotransformation processes involving both As and Se, thereby affecting the relative amounts of different chemical forms varying in their toxicity to humans as well as influencing biogeochemical cycling.
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spelling pubmed-15685062006-09-18 Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium. Mushak, P Environ Health Perspect Research Article The potential impact of acidic precipitation on the environmental mobility of the metalloids arsenic (As) and selenium (Se) has not been given much attention and is poorly understood. As with other elements, the interest here is the potential effect of environmental acidification on environmental behavior in ways that are relevant to human exposure to these metalloids. Available information on acid precipitation and the environmental behavior of these metalloids do, however, permit some preliminary conclusions to be drawn. Both As and Se appear to be mobilized from household plumbing into tap water by the corrosive action of soft, mildly acidic water, while surface water catchment systems in areas impacted by acidic deposition may contain elevated soluble As levels. Acidification of aquatic ecosystems that are drinking water sources may pose the prospect of enhanced release of As from sediment to water as well as reduction in water levels of Se. Acidification of ground waters, where As appears to be especially mobile, is of particular concern in this regard. The potential impact of acidic deposition on As and Se in soils cannot readily be assessed with respect to human exposure, but it would appear that the behavior of these metalloids in poorly buffered, poorly immobilizing soils, e.g., sandy soils of low metal hydrous oxide content, would be most affected. The effect is opposite for the two elements; lowered pH would appear to enhance As mobility and to reduce Se availability. Altered acidity of both soil and aquatic systems poses a risk for altered biotransformation processes involving both As and Se, thereby affecting the relative amounts of different chemical forms varying in their toxicity to humans as well as influencing biogeochemical cycling. 1985-11 /pmc/articles/PMC1568506/ /pubmed/4076075 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Mushak, P
Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title_full Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title_fullStr Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title_full_unstemmed Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title_short Potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
title_sort potential impact of acid precipitation on arsenic and selenium.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4076075
work_keys_str_mv AT mushakp potentialimpactofacidprecipitationonarsenicandselenium