Geography, asked by rashmi80, 1 year ago

how are industries responsible for making soil unfit for agriculture ​

Answers

Answered by vansh921
2

Answer:

industries release many harmful chemicals.

Soil pollution can have a number of harmful effects on ecosystems and human, plants and animal health. ... Since the plants cannot get rid of these molecules, they accumulate in the plant, causing higher amounts of pollution to exist in the plant than in the soil.

Answered by ZareenaTabassum
0

The poorly consolidated inorganic or organic substance just on surface of the planet known as soil is called soil.

It is the typical course of growth of plants, the primary producers.

The topsoil, which is made from the decayed remains of plants and animals, is the best quality.

  • The unregulated discharge of wastewater and certain other sludges from home water usage, industrial discharges comprising a range of contaminants, farm agricultural runoff from livestock farming and outflow of irrigated agriculture, and urban drainage are common contributors to soil contamination.
  • The bulk of industrial effluents is composed of both solid & liquids debris.
  • However, while industrial effluents is discharged into waterways, solid garbage is merely discharged on the land.
  • These pollutants are full of toxic compounds and toxic substances, which ultimately contaminate the food chain.
  • The most typical waste byproducts as of mining and melting sectors are muck and rubble, which have a high mercury contamination.
  • These trash are simply tossed through into stream, which is also utilized for residential watering as well as other uses.
  • Highly mercury-contaminated plants products are produced by irrigation water with such a wastewater.
  • Soil contamination is caused by industrial dyes and pigment waste, coal ash of thermal energy plants, hydrocarbons, and more.

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