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Applied Environmental Research

Publication Date

2025

Abstract

This study assessed heavy metal contamination in roadside vegetables (Ipomoea batatas and Moringa oleifera) across five urbanized localities in Bukidnon, Philippines, and evaluated potential human health risks. Metal concentrations (Cd, Cr, Cu, Co, Fe, Mn, and Zn) were analyzed via atomic absorption spectro-photometry and compared against FAO/WHO maximum permissible limits. The results revealed severe contamination, with Mn (575.27–862.17 mg kg-1) and Fe (256.46–706.68 mg kg-1) dominating natural soil mineralogy (Adtuyon series) and anthropogenic inputs. Toxic Cr (16.20–21.93 mg kg-1) exceeded permissible limits by nine and a half times in Quezon. Health risk assessments revealed negligible noncarcinogenic risks (THQ<1) but significant carcinogenic risks (TCR: 4.02E-2 to 4.94E-2; exceeding the USEPA’s 1E-4 threshold), driven by Cd/Cr ingestion. Correlation analysis revealed synergistic (Zn-Fe: 0.453*) and antago-nistic (Zn-Cr: -0.417*) interactions. Urgent mitigation strategies include buffer zones (≥30 m from roads), *Moringa*-based phytoremediation, and TCR integration into national food safety policies.

DOI

10.35762/AER.2025031

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