Linda C. Roberts
Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Linda C. Roberts.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2010
Jessica Dittmar; Andreas Voegelin; Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Ganesh Chandra Saha; M. Ashraf Ali; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; Ruben Kretzschmar
Shallow groundwater, often rich in arsenic (As), is widely used for irrigation of dry season boro rice in Bangladesh. In the long term, this may lead to increasing As contents in rice paddy soils, which threatens rice yields, food quality, and human health. The objective of this study was to quantify gains and losses of soil As in a rice paddy field during irrigation and monsoon flooding over a three-year period. Samples were collected twice a year on a 3D-sampling grid to account for the spatially heterogeneous As distribution within the soil. Gains and losses of soil As in different depth segments were calculated using a mass-balance approach. Annual As input with irrigation water was estimated as 4.4 +/- 0.4 kg ha(-1) a(-1). Within the top 40 cm of soil, the mean As accumulation over three years amounted to 2.4 +/- 0.4 kg ha(-1) a(-1), implying that on average 2.0 kg ha(-1) a(-1) were lost from the soil. Seasonal changes of soil As showed that 1.05 to 2.1 kg ha(-1) a(-1) were lost during monsoon flooding. The remaining As-loss (up to 0.95 kg ha(-1) a(-1)) was attributed to downward flow with percolating irrigation water. Despite these losses, we estimate that total As within the top 40 cm of soil at our field site would further increase by a factor of 1.5 to 2 by the year 2050 under current cultivation practices.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2011
Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Andreas Voegelin; Jessica Dittmar; Ruben Kretzschmar; Bernhard Wehrli; Ganesh Chandra Saha; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; M. Ashraf Ali
In Bangladesh, irrigation of dry season rice (boro) with arsenic-contaminated groundwater is leading to increased As levels in soils and rice, and to concerns about As-induced yield reduction. Arsenic concentrations and speciation in soil porewater are strongly influenced by redox conditions, and thus by water management during rice growth. We studied the dynamics of As, Fe, P, Si, and other elements in porewater of a paddy field near Sreenagar (Munshiganj), irrigated according to local practice, in which flooding was intermittent. During early rice growth, As porewater concentrations reached up to 500 μg L(-1) and were dominated by As(III), but As release was constrained to the lower portion of the soil above the plow pan. In the later part of the season, soil conditions were oxic throughout the depth range relevant to rice roots and porewater concentrations only intermittently increased to ∼150 μg L(-1) As(V) following irrigation events. Our findings suggest that intermittent irrigation, currently advocated in Bangladesh for water-saving purposes, may be a promising means of reducing As input to paddy soils and rice plant exposure to As.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2010
Jessica Dittmar; Andreas Voegelin; Felix Maurer; Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Ganesh Chandra Saha; M. Ashraf Ali; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; Ruben Kretzschmar
Groundwater rich in arsenic (As) is extensively used for dry season boro rice cultivation in Bangladesh, leading to long-term As accumulation in soils. This may result in increasing levels of As in rice straw and grain, and eventually, in decreasing rice yields due to As phytotoxicity. In this study, we investigated the As contents of rice straw and grain over three consecutive harvest seasons (2005-2007) in a paddy field in Munshiganj, Bangladesh, which exhibits a documented gradient in soil As caused by annual irrigation with As-rich groundwater since the early 1990s. The field data revealed that straw and grain As concentrations were elevated in the field and highest near the irrigation water inlet, where As concentrations in both soil and irrigation water were highest. Additionally, a pot experiment with soils and rice seeds from the field site was carried out in which soil and irrigation water As were varied in a full factorial design. The results suggested that both soil As accumulated in previous years and As freshly introduced with irrigation water influence As uptake during rice growth. At similar soil As contents, plants grown in pots exhibited similar grain and straw As contents as plants grown in the field. This suggested that the results from pot experiments performed at higher soil As levels can be used to assess the effect of continuing soil As accumulation on As content and yield of rice. On the basis of a recently published scenario of long-term As accumulation at the study site, we estimate that, under unchanged irrigation practice, average grain As concentrations will increase from currently ∼0.15 mg As kg(-1) to 0.25-0.58 mg As kg(-1) by the year 2050. This translates to a 1.5-3.8 times higher As intake by the local population via rice, possibly exceeding the provisional tolerable As intake value defined by FAO/WHO.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2011
Rebecca B. Neumann; Allison P. St. Vincent; Linda C. Roberts; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; M. Ashraf Ali; Charles F. Harvey
Irrigation of rice fields in Bangladesh with arsenic-contaminated groundwater transfers tens of cubic kilometers of water and thousands of tons of arsenic from aquifers to rice fields each year. Here we combine observations of infiltration patterns with measurements of porewater chemical composition from our field site in Munshiganj Bangladesh to characterize the mobility of arsenic in soils beneath rice fields. We find that very little arsenic delivered by irrigation returns to the aquifer, and that recharging water mobilizes little, if any, arsenic from rice field subsoils. Arsenic from irrigation water is deposited on surface soils and sequestered along flow paths that pass through bunds, the raised soil boundaries around fields. Additionally, timing of flow into bunds limits the transport of biologically available organic carbon from rice fields into the subsurface where it could stimulate reduction processes that mobilize arsenic from soils and sediments. Together, these results explain why groundwater irrigated rice fields act as net sinks of arsenic from groundwater.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2004
Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Thomas Ruettimann; Morsaline Billah; and Abdul Wahab Khan; Mohammad Tariqur Rahman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2007
Jessica Dittmar; Andreas Voegelin; Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Ganesh Chandra Saha; M. Ashraf Ali; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; Ruben Kretzschmar
Environmental Science & Technology | 2007
Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Jessica Dittmar; Andreas Voegelin; Ganesh Chandra Saha; M. Ashraf Ali; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; Ruben Kretzschmar
Nature Geoscience | 2010
Linda C. Roberts; Stephan J. Hug; Jessica Dittmar; Andreas Voegelin; Ruben Kretzschmar; Bernhard Wehrli; Olaf A. Cirpka; Ganesh Chandra Saha; M. Ashraf Ali; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman
Applied Geochemistry | 2011
Stephan J. Hug; Dominique Gaertner; Linda C. Roberts; Mario Schirmer; Thomas Ruettimann; Thomas M. Rosenberg; A. B. M. Badruzzaman; M. Ashraf Ali
PMC | 2011
Rebecca B. Neumann; Allison P. St. Vincent; Linda C. Roberts; A. Borhan M. Badruzzaman; M. Ashraf Ali; Charles F. Harvey
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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