Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Zeitschriften
DOI 10.1186/s12302-023-00824-2
Lizenz creative commons licence
Titel (primär) Human health and ecology at risk: a case study of metal pollution in Lahore, Pakistan
Autor Iqbal, H.H.; Siddique, A. ORCID logo ; Qadir, A.; Ahmed, S.R.; Liess, M.; Shahid, N.
Quelle Environmental Sciences Europe
Erscheinungsjahr 2024
Department ETOX
Band/Volume 36
Seite von art. 9
Sprache englisch
Topic T9 Healthy Planet
Supplements https://ndownloader.figstatic.com/files/43965246
Keywords Heavy metals; Human health; Ecology; Risk assessment; Drinking water contamination; Surface water contamination
Abstract

Background

With rapid industrial development, heavy metal contamination has become a major public health and ecological concern worldwide. Although knowledge about metal pollution in European water resources is increasing, monitoring data and assessments in developing countries are rare. In order to protect human health and aquatic ecosystems, it is necessary to investigate heavy metal content and its consequences to human health and ecology. Accordingly, we collected 200 water samples from different water resources including groundwater, canals, river and drains, and investigated metal contamination and its implications for human and ecological health. This is the first comprehensive study in the region that considered all the water resources for metal contamination and associated human health and ecological risks together.

Results

Here we show that the water resources of Lahore (Pakistan) are highly contaminated with metals, posing human and ecological health risks. Approximately 26% of the groundwater samples are unsuitable for drinking and carry the risk of cancer. Regarding dermal health risks, groundwater, canal, river, and drain water respectively showed 40%, 74%, 80%, and 90% of samples exceeding the threshold limit of the health risk index (HRI > 1). Regarding ecological risks, almost all the water samples exceeded the chronic and acute threshold limits for algae, fish, and crustaceans. Only 42% of groundwater samples were below the acute threshold limits. In the case of pollution index, 72%, 56%, and 100% of samples collected from canals, river Ravi, and drains were highly contaminated.

Conclusions

In conclusion, this comprehensive study shows high metal pollution in water resources and elucidates that human health and aquatic ecosystems are at high risk. Therefore, urgent and comprehensive measures are imperative to mitigate the escalating risks to human health and ecosystems.

dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=28456
Iqbal, H.H., Siddique, A., Qadir, A., Ahmed, S.R., Liess, M., Shahid, N. (2024):
Human health and ecology at risk: a case study of metal pollution in Lahore, Pakistan
Environ. Sci. Eur. 36 , art. 9 10.1186/s12302-023-00824-2