Biodegradation
of Chemicals in Unspiked Surface Waters
Downstream of Wastewater Treatment Plants
Version 3 2019-02-15, 19:48Version 3 2019-02-15, 19:48
Version 2 2019-02-14, 18:20Version 2 2019-02-14, 18:20
Version 1 2019-02-06, 17:03Version 1 2019-02-06, 17:03
Posted on 2019-02-15 - 19:48
The OECD 309 guideline uses spiked
incubation tests to provide
data on biodegradation kinetics in surface waters. However, potential
limitations of spiking test chemicals into the studied water have
not been investigated. We conducted the OECD 309 test with unspiked
surface water relying on chemical residues present in the water. Parallel
experiments were conducted with the same water spiked with 13 chemicals
at higher concentrations (50 μg L–1). Six
chemicals detected in both the spiked and the unspiked systems were
biodegraded. For each chemical the concentration change over time
differed between the systems. Tramadol and venlafaxine showed constant
concentrations in the spiked systems but increasing concentrations
in the unspiked systems. Atenolol and metoprolol showed first-order
elimination with no lag in the unspiked systems, compared to a lag
of 15–28 d followed by zero-order elimination kinetics in the
spiked systems. Acesulfame was only slightly degraded (<50%) in
the unspiked system, while removal was complete (>99%) in the spiked
systems. Gabapentin displayed a complex behavior where the features
differed markedly between the spiked and the unspiked systems. We
conclude that spiking can strongly influence biodegradation, reducing
the environmental relevance of test results. Under some conditions
biodegradation can be measured in unspiked natural waters instead.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCite
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Li, Zhe; McLachlan, Michael S. (2019). Biodegradation
of Chemicals in Unspiked Surface Waters
Downstream of Wastewater Treatment Plants. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b05191