Abstract

Heavy metals such as Zn, Pb, Fe, and Cu are abundant in the environment and contribute largely to the sustainability and equilibrium of ecosystem processes. However, because of their bioaccumulation, nondegradability, and the excessive amounts in which they exist, these metals contaminate the food chain and subsequently become a source of toxicity to human beings and the entire ecological function. This is a major issue of concern within the study of environmental science and geochemistry. Although there is a global significance to the issue, it seems more immediate for the developing countries (DCs) such as Nigeria, where the pressure of the teeming population escalates the exigency for human sustainability, food security, and total eradication of hunger. Within the Nigerian context, many studies have examined this all-important issue, but most of these studies are fragmented and limited within the purview of mostly individual states and localities within the country. Taken on a wider geographical scale, the discussions and perspectives of these studies on heavy metal contamination of the food chain offer insufficient insight and expose merely a snapshot of the actual situation. As a result of this, a country-wide knowledge base of the implications of heavy metals on the food chain is lacking. Thus, the present study synthesises existing literature and their findings to create a knowledge base on the vulnerability of the food chain in Nigeria. Aquatic foods, fruits, vegetables, and major staple food such as tubers are the major host of carcinogenic and mutagenic components of heavy metals in Nigeria. This study motivates the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON), along with other food and agricultural agencies, to intensify their efforts in monitoring and analysing food components, and we advise consumers to eat with certain degrees of caveat.

Highlights

  • Since his famous publication titled, “What is a heavy metal?,” Hawkes [1] has spurred far greater interests for more and more debates within environmental science, geochemistry, and toxicology research

  • Hawkes’ study is a seminal tool to drive a deeper and more cognate exploration of heavy metals. e context by which he introduced and expounded heavy metals as the block of metals and metalloids found in Groups 3 to 16 and in Periods 4 and greater of the periodic table makes sense to conclude that a metal is heavy not necessarily because of its density, rather its chemistry. is has remained a building block which various studies, in environmental science literature, have used to define heavy metals comprising metals and metalloids which are associated with adverse environmental effects, mostly pollution, toxicity, and contamination

  • Many ideas drawn from extant research are logical pointers to what might be the likely implications of heavy metals on the food chain

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Summary

Introduction

Since his famous publication titled, “What is a heavy metal?,” Hawkes [1] has spurred far greater interests for more and more debates within environmental science, geochemistry, and toxicology research. “Assessment of potentially toxic heavy metals and health risk in water, sediments, and different fish species of River Kabul, Pakistan,” Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, vol 24, no. “Trophic transfer, bioaccumulation, and biomagnification of non-essential hazardous heavy metals and metalloids in food chains/webs-concepts and implications for wildlife and human health,” Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, vol 25, no. “Heavy metals in food crops: health risks, fate, mechanisms, and management,” Environment International, vol 125, pp. “A review on heavy metals contamination in soil: effects, sources, and remediation techniques,” Soil and Sediment Contamination: An International Journal, vol 28, no. O. Numbere, “ e impact of nutrient and heavy metal concentrations on waste dump soils in mangrove and nonmangrove forest in the Niger delta, Nigeria,” Journal of Energy and Natural Resources, vol 8, no. Numbere, “ e impact of nutrient and heavy metal concentrations on waste dump soils in mangrove and nonmangrove forest in the Niger delta, Nigeria,” Journal of Energy and Natural Resources, vol 8, no. 3, p. 109, 2019

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