Fate
of Selenium in Soils at a Seleniferous Site Recorded
by High Precision Se Isotope Measurements
Posted on 2015-08-18 - 00:00
Selenium
poisoning is a significant health problem in parts of
Punjab, India, which is an area of intense agricultural productivity.
To determine the complex soil dynamics that control distribution of
Se in this area, we measured concentrations and δ82/76Se of bulk Se and individual Se pools in four soil profiles. This
was compared against δ82/76Se of crops and groundwater
used for irrigation. The isotopic composition of bulk Se and component
Se pools reveal spatial heterogeneity. The bulk δ82/76Se show progressively lower values with increasing soil depth indicating
the preferential migration of isotopically lighter Se downward through
the soil profile. The δ82/76Se of water-soluble Se
is isotopically heavier than δ82/76Se of adsorbed
Se, suggesting Se isotope fractionation by reduction prior to scavenging
by reactive minerals in the soil. The organically bound Se is isotopically
lighter than water-soluble Se and correlates with the C/N ratio at
different soil depths. Thus, Se immobilization by redox cycling controls
the biogeochemical Se cycle in the soil. Se isotope ratios help to
trace biochemical processes of Se in agricultural seleniferous soils
and provide an important assessment for better soil management mitigating
Se concentrations of ecotoxicological levels.
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Schilling, Kathrin; Johnson, Thomas
M.; Dhillon, Karaj
S.; R. D. Mason, Paul (2016). Fate
of Selenium in Soils at a Seleniferous Site Recorded
by High Precision Se Isotope Measurements. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b00477