{"title":"Distribution and Contamination of Heavy Metals in the Surface Sediments of Ambarli Port Area (Istanbul, Turkey)","authors":"E. Sarı, S. Ünlü, R. Apak, N. Balci, B. Koldemir","doi":"10.5053/EKOLOJI.2014.901","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The geochemical characteristics of the surface sediments of the Ambarli Port in Istanbul providing service for over 43.000 ships in the last decade are basically unknown. In this study, The distribution of total carbonate and metals in sediments was investigated and geochemical forms of the sediment-associated metals assessed to identify their possible sources. Metal contamination levels of sediments were evaluated with the aid of enrichment factor (EF) and index of geoaccumulation (I geo ) calculations. The degree of pollution in surface sediments yielded the Igeo ranking: Zn > Pb> Cr > Cu > As > Fe > Ni=Al >V, essentially not revealing pollution by Al, As, Fe, Ni and V. The highest Igeo and EF levels of Cr, Cu, Ni and Zn were found at the nearest station to Ambarli Port, indicating port activities as the source. Sequential selective leaching tests confirmed that As, Cr and Fe were mostly found in the residual phase, whereas Cu, Ni, Pb, V and Zn were mainly associated with the non-residual phase, possibly indicating the potentially higher mobility of the latter ions than those inherited from parent geological material. Based on statistical approaches, anthropogenic and natural geological factors were identified controlling the heavy metal variability in the sediments. This research is the first of its kind ever carried out in the Ambarli Port Area of Turkey.","PeriodicalId":11598,"journal":{"name":"Ekoloji","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-03-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"14","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ekoloji","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5053/EKOLOJI.2014.901","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 14
Abstract
The geochemical characteristics of the surface sediments of the Ambarli Port in Istanbul providing service for over 43.000 ships in the last decade are basically unknown. In this study, The distribution of total carbonate and metals in sediments was investigated and geochemical forms of the sediment-associated metals assessed to identify their possible sources. Metal contamination levels of sediments were evaluated with the aid of enrichment factor (EF) and index of geoaccumulation (I geo ) calculations. The degree of pollution in surface sediments yielded the Igeo ranking: Zn > Pb> Cr > Cu > As > Fe > Ni=Al >V, essentially not revealing pollution by Al, As, Fe, Ni and V. The highest Igeo and EF levels of Cr, Cu, Ni and Zn were found at the nearest station to Ambarli Port, indicating port activities as the source. Sequential selective leaching tests confirmed that As, Cr and Fe were mostly found in the residual phase, whereas Cu, Ni, Pb, V and Zn were mainly associated with the non-residual phase, possibly indicating the potentially higher mobility of the latter ions than those inherited from parent geological material. Based on statistical approaches, anthropogenic and natural geological factors were identified controlling the heavy metal variability in the sediments. This research is the first of its kind ever carried out in the Ambarli Port Area of Turkey.
在过去十年中为43,000多艘船舶提供服务的伊斯坦布尔Ambarli港的地表沉积物的地球化学特征基本上是未知的。本文研究了沉积物中总碳酸盐和金属的分布,并对沉积物相关金属的地球化学形态进行了评价,以确定其可能的来源。通过计算富集因子(EF)和地质堆积指数(I geo)对沉积物的金属污染水平进行了评价。地表沉积物污染程度的Igeo排序为:Zn > Pb> Cr > Cu > As > Fe > Ni=Al >V,基本不反映Al、As、Fe、Ni和V的污染程度。Cr、Cu、Ni和Zn的Igeo和EF水平最高的站点位于离安巴里港最近的站点,表明港口活动是污染源。连续选择性浸出试验证实,As、Cr和Fe主要存在于残余相中,而Cu、Ni、Pb、V和Zn主要存在于非残余相中,这可能表明后者离子的迁移率可能高于母质地质物质。基于统计方法,确定了控制沉积物中重金属变异的人为和自然地质因素。这项研究是在土耳其安巴里港区进行的第一次此类研究。
期刊介绍:
Cessation. Ekoloji is an international journal that focuses on papers that report results from original research on all disciplines engaged in the field of environmental research. We welcome articles that cover the entire spectrum of environmental problems and environmental pollutants, whether chemical, biological or physical. Its coverage extends to all environmentally related issues: air and water pollution, solid waste, noise, recycling, natural resources, ecology and environmental protection. It includes articles on basic and applied environmental pollution research, including environmental engineering and environmental health. All types of pollution are covered, including atmospheric pollutants, detergents, fertilizers, industrial effluents, metals, mining wastes, oil, pesticides, plastics, radioactive materials and sewage. It also includes research papers on ecological and environmental issues such as climate change, biodiversity. The primary criteria for publication are scientific quality and ecological/environmental significance.
The journal will be read and contributed to by biologists, applied ecologists, environmental scientists, natural resource specialists, environmental engineers, environmental health specialists, agro-ecologists, veterinaries, agricultural engineers, landscape planners and designers. The journal welcomes full "research papers" and short "research notes", only in the English language.