| Elemental
Woe
Studies indicate an urgent need to map
areas that have selenium-rich soil because the element has
been linked to aridity there. A study published in the September
issue of Journal of Environmental Management revealed that
food grains from some arid regions in Northern India had high
selenium.
For the study, researchers from the National University of
Singapore and Maharshi Dayanand University in Haryana collected
food grains from Rajasthan, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh and Haryana
and tested the selenium content in them. They found that while
extremely dry areas like Rajasthan and southern parts of Haryana
had relatively higher selenium in food grains, the amount
in Punjab, Himachal Pradesh and northern parts of Haryana
was normal and grains from areas that were affected by floods
along the Yamuna had lower levels of selenium. Estimations
of selenium levels in food grains and soil showed that while
the problem is intense in some pockets of Punjab and Haryana,
in most parts of northern India, it is within safe limits.
According to the study, the highest level of selenium detected
was 0.272 mg/kg in wheat from Jind in south Haryana.
These levels are lower than those found by K S Dhillon, retired
professor of Punjab Agricultural University, who has studied
selenium content in soil in Punjab for about three decades.
He detected up to 4.5 mg/kg of selenium in soil in some villages.
Soil samples containing more than 0.5 mg/kg selenium lead
to plants with more than 5 mg/kg selenium, he says. Plants
containing more than 5 mg/kg are considered toxic.
Dhillon says, In well irrigated or high rainfall areas,
selenium being water soluble either leaches down to lower
layers or gets transported to low lying areas. This leaching
cannot take place in arid regions and selenium accumulates
in the surface layer. In plants, selenium toxicity hampers
root development and chlorophyll formation, while in human
beings, it causes hair loss, tooth decay, nail malformation,
dermatitis and neurological problems.
Another study published in the Journal of Plant Nutrition
and Soil Science in April this year said that significant
amount of the element could be lost from the soil during irrigation
and rainfall. Dhillon, who is one of the authors of this study,
said irrigation with selenium-contaminated groundwater increased
selenium content of the topsoil in some pockets of Punjab
and Haryana and hence the soil exhibited selenium toxicity.
His study found that selenium content of wheat shoots grown
after rice cultivation (in selenium-rich groundwater) was
20 times higher than that of the maize crop, which was grown
after wheat. He said that there was a negative relationship
between rainfall and selenium. With decreasing rainfall, seleniferous
soil is likely to have even less runoff of selenium and hence
more selenium will remain in the soil. But there is still
no evidence that intensity of the problem in selenium toxic
areas will increase with decrease of rainfall. He stressed
it is imperative to probe the link further.
Source : Down To Earth
Date: October, 2008

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