Experiment was carried out using 12 colonies of honey bees bred in hives located near an extraurban crossroad. We analyzed the Pb, Cd and Zn deposited on the bee's surfaces and the heavy metal accumulation in the foragers, dead bees, honey products and some environmental markers during nine weeks of
Honey as an indicator of heavy metal contamination
β Scribed by K. C. Jones
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 574 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0049-6979
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The potential use of honey as an indicator in mineral prospecting and environmental contamination studies has been investigated. Silver, Cd, Cu, and Pb levels are reported in honeys collected throughout the U.K. The elemental content of honeys was investigated in relation to that in the soils collected from within the foraging area. For samples collected over two seasons the following concentrations were found Ag <0.1 to 6.5ngg -1 (d.w.); Cd <0.3 to 300ngg-1; Cu 35 to 6510ngg-~; Pb <2 to 200 ng g-~. Considerable spatial and seasonal fluctuations were apparent. No correlations were observed between honey and soil concentrations for either Cu or Pb. It is concluded that the low concentrations of heavy metals in honey and their inherent variability (due to differences in floral source, foraging range, entrapment of atmospheric particulates on the flower, etc.) detract from the reliable use of honey as a monitoring tool. The relative merits of honeybees, pollen and beeswax for environmental monitoring or biogeochemical prospecting studies are also briefly discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES