Arsenic contamination of rainfed versus irrigated rice
Citation
Ingram, Ben, Muhammad Ashraful Habib, Sarah E. Johnson-Beebout, Cecilia Acuin, Ron Corstanje, Robert W. Simmons, and Guy JD Kirk. "Arsenic contamination of rainfed versus irrigated rice." Environmental Pollution (2025): 126856.
Abstract/Description
Arsenic (As) contamination of rice remains a major human health issue in Asia. Most research has been on irrigated rice. However much of the projected increase in global rice demand over coming decades must be met by rainfed lowland systems, for which As relations are poorly understood. We present the most comprehensive survey to date of As in rice in farmers’ fields across Bangladesh, covering both irrigated and rainfed systems. We collected rice grain and soil at 943 sites in the three rice growing seasons: irrigated Boro, rainfed Aus, and longer-duration rainfed Aman. Grain As concentrations increased in the order Aman ≪ Boro < Aus with 2, 25 and 41 % of the sites exceeding permitted thresholds, respectively. The greater concentration in Aus than Boro challenges the accepted wisdom that contaminated irrigation water is the main source of As. The main growth and grain filling periods, when most As is taken up, coincide in Aus with the peak of the monsoon rains, suggesting a link between rainfall and high grain As. We suggest this is due to stronger soil reducing conditions and hence As solubility during peak rainfall. We discuss implications for rainfed lowland rice across Asia and mitigation options.
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Author ORCID identifiers
Dr. Muhammad Ashraful Habib https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5550-8459
Sarah Beebout https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1276-6786
Cecilia Acuin https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8999-4010
Ron Corstanje https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3866-8316
Robert Simmons https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9594-9934
Guy Kirk https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7739-9772
