The potential for kelp manufacture to lead to arsenic pollution of remote Scottish islands

Chemosphere
G J RiekieA A Meharg

Abstract

Burning seaweed to produce kelp, valued for its high potash and soda content, was formerly a significant industry in remote coastal areas of Scotland and elsewhere. Given the high concentrations of arsenic in seaweeds, up to 100 mg kg(-1), this study investigates the possibility that the kelp industry caused arsenic contamination of these pristine environments. A series of laboratory-scale seaweed burning experiments was conducted, and analysis of the products using HPLC ICP-MS shows that at least 40% of the arsenic originally in the seaweed could have been released into the fumes. The hypothesis that the burning process transforms arsenic from low toxicity arsenosugars in the original seaweeds (Fucus vesiculosus and Laminaria digitata) to highly toxic inorganic forms, predominantly arsenate, is consistent with As speciation analysis results. A field study conducted on Westray, Orkney, once a major centre for kelp production, shows that elevated arsenic levels (10.7+/-3.0 mg kg(-1), compared to background levels of 1.7+/-0.2 mg kg(-1)) persist in soils in the immediate vicinity of the kelp burning pits. A model combining results from the burning experiments with data from historical records demonstrates the potential for arseni...Continue Reading

References

Feb 28, 2001·Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry·J FeldmannP Pengprecha
Apr 29, 2004·Environmental Science & Technology·Marie-Pierre PavageauOlivier F X Donard
Nov 18, 2005·Chemosphere·Zdenka SlejkovecJohannes T van Elteren

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