Environmental Systems Research (May 2024)
Disposal of spent oil into soils around auto parts markets impacts heavy metal concentrations and poses a potential ecological risk
Abstract
Abstract Nigeria is facing the problem of soil degradation as a result of continuous deposition of spent oil in the soil. The physiochemical properties, including heavy metals concentrations, of spent oil contaminated soils and adjacent control soils were investigated at 0–15 and 15–30 cm depths at Ladipo and Berger auto-mobile Markets in Lagos, southwest Nigeria. The soils were collected in triplicate and analyzed in a 2 (location) * 2 (study site) * 2 (soil depth) factorial experiment. The results showed a uniform soil texture in both study sites and at both soil depths, with loamy sand at Ladipo and sandy loam at Berger. Bulk density was significantly decreased, while the total porosity (46.44%), organic C (21.79 g kg− 1), available P (16.48 mg kg− 1), Na+ (0.72 cmolc kg− 1) and K+ (0.81 cmolc kg− 1) increased in the contaminated site compared to the control site. Soil pH was higher at Ladipo (8.4) than at Berger (7.4). However, the soil pH and available P concentration decreased in the contaminated soil compared to the control at both locations, resulting in a decrease in available P concentration of more than 300% and 100% at Ladipo and Berger, respectively. At the Ladipo location, the concentration of Ca2+ was higher in the control than in the contaminated counterpart, while the opposite was true at the Berger location. The concentrations of the heavy metals Pb and Zn in the contaminated soils were low, while the Cu concentration was high. Although the concentrations of these heavy metals were below the standards for potential environmental risks, the high Cu concentration at both locations poses a potential ecological risk and may affect soil and human health as Cu accumulates in critical levels in the soil due to the continued irresponsible disposal of spent oil on the ground.
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