Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)

Abstract In this research, the concentrations of nitrates were investigated in well water sampled from the irrigated perimeter of Beni Moussa (Tadla plain, Morocco), and human health risks via ingestion and dermal pathways for individuals in different age brackets were assessed using the chronic dai...

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Main Author: Ahmed Barakat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-04-01
Series:Geoenvironmental Disasters
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40677-020-00149-9
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spelling doaj-e605f2214ee54cc3aa72d5fdabdff8fe2020-11-25T02:11:52ZengSpringerOpenGeoenvironmental Disasters2197-86702020-04-017111110.1186/s40677-020-00149-9Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)Ahmed Barakat0Georesources and environment Team, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université Sultan Moulay SlimaneAbstract In this research, the concentrations of nitrates were investigated in well water sampled from the irrigated perimeter of Beni Moussa (Tadla plain, Morocco), and human health risks via ingestion and dermal pathways for individuals in different age brackets were assessed using the chronic daily intake, the dermal absorbed dose and hazard index (HI). The results showed that the groundwater NO3 contents were between 4.20 to 80.46 mg L− 1, with an average of 32.11 mg L− 1, indicating anthropogenic inputs caused by the infiltration of nitrates not consumed by plants or surface industrial and domestic wastewater into the shallow aquifer. Compared to the Moroccan standard, 17.78%, 40.00%, 37.78% and 4.44% of sampled wells showed poor, fair, good or excellent quality, respectively. For non-carcinogenic risk, the oral ingestion of nitrate appeared to be the main exposure pathway for local human receptors causing the high non-carcinogenic risk, and the dermal exposure met within the accepted precautionary criterion. Infants in the study area are more likely to experience adverse effects to higher nitrate level in groundwater (3.04E-01 < HI < 1.80E+ 00), followed by female (2.39E-01 < HI < 1.41E+ 00), then male (2.22E-01 < HI < 1.31E+ 00) and finally children (2.08E-01 < HI < 1.23E+ 00). The resulting spatial variation in HI values was greatly influenced by human activities and population density. The results of this study could help to shape effective environmental management measures for enhancing the groundwater quality and ensuring safe drinking water.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40677-020-00149-9Beni Moussa irrigated perimeterGroundwaterNO3 contaminationPublic health risksAssessment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed Barakat
spellingShingle Ahmed Barakat
Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
Geoenvironmental Disasters
Beni Moussa irrigated perimeter
Groundwater
NO3 contamination
Public health risks
Assessment
author_facet Ahmed Barakat
author_sort Ahmed Barakat
title Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
title_short Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
title_full Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
title_fullStr Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
title_full_unstemmed Groundwater NO3 concentration and its potential health effects in Beni Moussa perimeter (Tadla plain, Morocco)
title_sort groundwater no3 concentration and its potential health effects in beni moussa perimeter (tadla plain, morocco)
publisher SpringerOpen
series Geoenvironmental Disasters
issn 2197-8670
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract In this research, the concentrations of nitrates were investigated in well water sampled from the irrigated perimeter of Beni Moussa (Tadla plain, Morocco), and human health risks via ingestion and dermal pathways for individuals in different age brackets were assessed using the chronic daily intake, the dermal absorbed dose and hazard index (HI). The results showed that the groundwater NO3 contents were between 4.20 to 80.46 mg L− 1, with an average of 32.11 mg L− 1, indicating anthropogenic inputs caused by the infiltration of nitrates not consumed by plants or surface industrial and domestic wastewater into the shallow aquifer. Compared to the Moroccan standard, 17.78%, 40.00%, 37.78% and 4.44% of sampled wells showed poor, fair, good or excellent quality, respectively. For non-carcinogenic risk, the oral ingestion of nitrate appeared to be the main exposure pathway for local human receptors causing the high non-carcinogenic risk, and the dermal exposure met within the accepted precautionary criterion. Infants in the study area are more likely to experience adverse effects to higher nitrate level in groundwater (3.04E-01 < HI < 1.80E+ 00), followed by female (2.39E-01 < HI < 1.41E+ 00), then male (2.22E-01 < HI < 1.31E+ 00) and finally children (2.08E-01 < HI < 1.23E+ 00). The resulting spatial variation in HI values was greatly influenced by human activities and population density. The results of this study could help to shape effective environmental management measures for enhancing the groundwater quality and ensuring safe drinking water.
topic Beni Moussa irrigated perimeter
Groundwater
NO3 contamination
Public health risks
Assessment
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40677-020-00149-9
work_keys_str_mv AT ahmedbarakat groundwaterno3concentrationanditspotentialhealtheffectsinbenimoussaperimetertadlaplainmorocco
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