Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

Evaluating a Soil Amendment for Cadmium Mitigation and Enhanced Nutritional Quality in Faba Bean Genotypes: Implications for Food Safety

Liping Cheng, Jiapan Lian, Xin Wang, Mehr Ahmed Mujtaba Munir, Xiwei Huang, Zhenli He, Cheng‐Jian Xu, Wenbin Tong, Xiaoe Yang

SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

This 2024 field study examined the efficacy of a soil amendment strategy for reducing cadmium bioaccumulation in faba bean whilst preserving or improving nutritional composition across cultivar variation. The work addresses the dual challenge of food safety (heavy metal contamination) and nutritional quality, with potential application to contaminated agricultural land. As suggested by the title, the findings may support safer pulse production in cadmium-affected regions.

UK applicability

Cadmium contamination of UK soils is localised but present, particularly in areas with historical mining or atmospheric deposition. Findings on genotype selection and amendment application could inform risk management strategies for pulse growers on affected land, though UK-specific validation would be required.

Key measures

Cadmium concentration in faba bean tissues; nutrient density metrics; genotype-specific responses to soil amendment treatment

Outcomes reported

The study evaluated how soil amendments reduce cadmium accumulation in faba bean tissues whilst maintaining or enhancing nutritional quality across different faba bean genotypes. Outcomes likely include cadmium concentration measurements and nutrient density assessments.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Pesticides, contaminants & food safety
Study type
Research
Study design
Field trial
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
System type
Arable cereals
DOI
10.2139/ssrn.4963486
Catalogue ID
SNmoy14ka2-itm61n

Topic tags

Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.