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  • Impact of Lebanese practices in industry, agriculture and urbanization on soil toxicity. Evaluation of the Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) levels in soil.

Impact of Lebanese practices in industry, agriculture and urbanization on soil toxicity. Evaluation of the Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) levels in soil.

Chemosphere (2018-07-10)
Banan Soukarieh, Khaled El Hawari, Mohamad El Husseini, Helene Budzinski, Farouk Jaber
ABSTRACT

This study was carried out in order to investigate the toxicity on Lebanese soil and to show the impact of the anthropogenic activities, industrialization and urbanization, on the release of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) in Lebanese soils. Hundred soil samples of different land use were screened for 17 PAHs using a UAE/GC-MS method. Detection frequency varied between 76 and 100% for most of the PAHs, where the ΣPAHs ranged from 33.5 to 4062.9 ng g-1. Moreover, BaPeq values varied between 0.93 and 332.4 ng g-1. BaPeq values in industrial and urban soils were 777 and 256 times higher than those in rural soil, respectively. None of the soil samples showed concentrations above the safe BaPeq value of 600 ng g-1. Significant decrease in concentration levels of ΣPAHs was obtained in the following order: Industrial, urban, traffic and agricultural. Furthermore, the relative high contribution of Chrysene, Benzo(a)Anthracene and Benzo(k)Fluoranthene in agricultural soils indicates that open burning remains an adopted way in Lebanon for disposal of agricultural residues, while the predominance of Benzo(ghi)Perylene and Benzo(b)Fluoranthene in industrial soils suggests the broad use of diesel powered engines in the Lebanese industrial sector. The ratios of Low Molecular Weight/High Molecular Weight and fluoranthene/fluoranthene+pyrene (Fln/Fln+Pyr) showed that PAHs in soil samples are mainly pyrogenic and created during combustion of petrol, coal, wood and other biomasses.