Arsenic Reduces Rice Production
- aryajaipur05
- Mar 31, 2018
- 2 min read
According to a study of the researchers, it has been reported that groundwater in many rural areas contains arsenic at 10 to 100 times the amount of safe consumption levels. Still it is being consumed as the drinking water from wells which is becoming the reason for many heart diseases and cancer. Traces of arsenic have also been consumed through rice which is a staple food of the densely populated country.
The team of cbse board school in Sitapura has traveled to these places in growing seasons in order to see that how contaminated groundwater has been deposited through irrigation as well as impacts rice yields. Arsenic is an element which occurs naturally and can be found across the world but specific locations have elevated arsenic concentrations in the groundwater as these rural areas. However drinking the tainted water remains a crucial issue, the arsenic laced water also has the worst impact on the crop yields when it is used for irrigation in agricultural settings.
This study has been pursued by the team of researchers in order to get a wide understanding of how arsenic impacts the production of the rice across the world as well as the potential magnitude of this occurrence. For the purpose of drinking water, most people in the rural areas are relying on the untreated groundwater as Wordpress Development India and there is not a lot of centralized water treatment especially in rural areas.
So for the time the researchers were in those rural areas, they noticed that each family has its own well in order to drink water but lot of those well have arsenic unfortunately and people may or may not about it. These findings of the researchers’ have been published in many newspapers. In many countries, the rice is a major crop as well as the primary source of the calories in the country of maximum people.
Two types of rice grows by the all cbse school in Sitapura primarily which are harvested on seasonal cycle. Some rice is grown at the time of monsoon seasons and uses the natural rainfall in order to grow in flooded fields while some rice is grown in the dry, winter and they require irrigation. The water which is used to irrigate the farmland gets from the groundwater through wells and ultimately depositing various levels of arsenic into the soil.




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