Environ Geochem Health. 2026 Feb 13;48(4):158. doi: 10.1007/s10653-026-03020-2.
ABSTRACT
The Daxing’anling region possesses China’s best-preserved cold-temperate primary forests, playing a vital role in the ecological security of Northeast China. This study investigates the hydrochemical characteristics, regulatory mechanisms, and potential health risks associated with nitrate in groundwater within the Songling area, aiming to provide scientific basis for sustainable water resource management in the region. By collecting 30 groundwater samples through systematic sampling, this study analyzed the groundwater chemistry characteristics and influencing factors in the study area using methods such as Piper’s three-line diagram, Gibbs diagram, factor analysis, ion ratio coefficients, and the APCS-MLR receptor model. Additionally, a health risk model was employed to assess health risks for different population groups. Results indicate: (1) The average pH value of groundwater in the study area is 7.14, exhibiting the smallest coefficient of variation (CV = 3.61). The average total hardness (TH) was 109.94 mg L-1, with 73.33% of samples containing calcium carbonate concentrations below 300 mg L-1. The average total dissolved solids (TDS) was 218.16 mg L-1, all TDS values < 1 g L-1. The average concentration of permanganate index (CODMn) was 1.05 mg L-1. Iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) exhibited the highest coefficients of variation ( ), with average values of 1.43 mg L-1 and 0.48 mg L-1, respectively. The dominant anion and cation components were (mean 34.23 mg L-1) and (mean 103.52 mg L-1), respectively. was the primary exceedance factor in groundwater within the study area (exceedance rate 26.67%). (2) The most ion ratios relative to TDS fell within defined ranges, with sampling points highly concentrated in the low-value zone (ratio < 0.5), clearly approaching the rock weathering endpoint. 83.33% of water samples were above the 1:1 line ( / > 1). The scatter plot fit slope between [(Ca2+ + Mg2+) – ( + )] and (Na+ + K+ – Cl–) is -1.74 (R2 = 0.74), approaching the theoretical exchange characteristic value of -1. (3) The KMO value in factor analysis was 0.603, and the Bartlett test showed a significance level of P < 0.001, indicating significant correlations among variables. Three principal factors with eigenvalues greater than 1 were extracted, collectively explaining 87.35% of the variance. APCS-MLR model analysis indicated groundwater chemical composition primarily originated from four principal contributors, including geological sources(F1, 37.24%), agricultural and lifestyle activities(F2, 12.70%), combined natural-human processes(F3, 14.00%), and other unknown sources(F4, 22.93%). (4) The average non-carcinogenic hazard index (HI) for groundwater nitrate exposure in children was 0.5973; The average HI for adult males was 0.3128; the average HI for adult females was 0.3963. The proportion of groundwater nitrate samples exceeding the non-carcinogenic risk (HI) threshold for children reached 23.33%, while the proportion for adults was only 10%. Among adult females, 16.67% of samples had HI values exceeding 0.8, indicating a potential for unacceptable risk. A comprehensive analysis leads to the following conclusions: (1) The groundwater in the study area is predominantly neutral to slightly alkaline, classified as low-hardness freshwater with extremely low levels of organic pollutants, indicating good water quality. Iron and manganese concentrations exhibit regionally inherent geochemical background characteristics. From an ionic composition perspective, groundwater is dominated by Ca2+ and , with its hydrochemical types primarily classified as HCO3-Ca type (1-A type) and HCO3-Ca Mg type (2-A type). (2) Groundwater chemical composition in the study area is primarily controlled by rock weathering, cation exchange, and human activities. Among these, the weathering and dissolution of carbonates, silicates, and gypsum jointly dominate the hydrogeochemical processes in this region. Additionally, human activities, particularly nitrate inputs from agricultural and domestic discharges, have become a significant factor altering the groundwater chemical environment. Specifically, , , and are mainly derived from the dissolution of carbonate and silicate minerals, whereas originates from rock-salt and silicates. is significantly influenced by mining activities and evaporite dissolution, while , , and are primarily attributed to domestic sewage and agricultural inputs. (3) Multivariate statistical analysis identified sources influencing groundwater chemistry as geological background sources, agriculture-lifestyle pollution sources, mixed natural-anthropogenic sources, and unknown. These sources exhibit an increasing trend from natural background to anthropogenic disturbance, indicating that geological background and water-rock interactions are the dominant forces shaping hydrochemical characteristics. However, various human activities also exert significant and widespread influence. (4) Nitrate Health Risk Assessment: Drinking water intake constitutes the primary pathway for nitrate-related health risks in humans. Among exposed populations, children face higher health risks than adults, with females exhibiting slightly higher risks than males. Overall, the health risks from nitrate contamination in the study area’s groundwater remain at a low level. Only a very small number of locations directly impacted by human and livestock activities show potential for exceeding concentration thresholds and elevated risks. The following four recommendations are proposed to strengthen water quality management in high-risk areas, promote scientific agricultural fertilization practices, improve wastewater treatment systems, and implement health monitoring and drinking water risk management for susceptible populations.
PMID:41686319 | DOI:10.1007/s10653-026-03020-2