Abstract

The fractionation and speciation analysis of heavy metals in bottom sediment samples from the Azov Sea were performed. Seven-step sequential extraction was used to extract element species differing in physicochemical mobility and biological availability. Special attention was paid to the study of ecologically valuable mobile fractions: exchangeable, acid-soluble, readily reducible, and readily oxidizable ones. It was shown that the total concentration of mobile copper, zinc, and lead species isolated in four extraction steps was higher than the MPCs for mobile species extractable with an ammonium acetate buffer solution (1.1–3.3 PMC), which points to the technogenic contamination of bottom sediments and their potential hazard to hydrobionts. For finely dispersed silt samples taken near the Kerch Strait, elevated concentrations of zinc and copper (up to 10 and 5 mg/kg, respectively) were found in the most mobile exchangeable fraction directly available to living organisms, which indicates the presence of an active contamination source in this water area. The binding of metals to mineral phases in samples of different lithological types was studied.

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