Abstract

This study investigates heavy metal pollution in agricultural soils and its associated health risks in Zhenjiang and Yangzhou in the core of the Yangtze River Delta, China, based on high-density sampling at 449 sites. Although the total concentrations of As and Cd remain below national Risk Intervention Values (GB 15618-2018), the Cd level significantly exceeds the national background, and the potential ecological risk index (PERI) indicates very high ecological risk (>320) at 88.2% of sites, driven primarily by Hg and Cd. The results show acceptable non-carcinogenic risks (HI < 1) for adults and children, but carcinogenic risks are elevated: arsenic alone exceeds the 1 × 10−6 threshold in 71.7% of adult and 92.1% of child scenarios, with the total carcinogenic risk averaging 1.89 × 10−6 (adults) and 3.05 × 10−6 (children). These probabilistic findings justify stricter local action thresholds for As and Cd in this densely populated rice-producing region and demonstrate the value of Monte Carlo simulation for delivering transparent, population-specific risk exceedance probabilities to support evidence-based regional soil management and food-safety policies.

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Factor Analysis and AIC

The Naseri Artificial Wetland was created by the discharge of agricultural drainage water, including effluent from the sugarcane development project. The continuous inflow of dr...

1987 Springer series in statistics 4043 citations

Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
article
Volume
15
Issue
24
Pages
2552-2552
Citations
0
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

0
OpenAlex
0
Influential
0
CrossRef

Cite This

Yubo Wen, Yuanyuan Wang, Wenbing Ji et al. (2025). Pollution Levels and Associated Health Risks of Heavy Metals in Agricultural Soils in Zhenjiang and Yangzhou, China. Agriculture , 15 (24) , 2552-2552. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15242552

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/agriculture15242552

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%