Contribution of waste water treatment plants to pesticide toxicity in agriculture catchments
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety. Bd. 145. 2017 S. 135 - 141
Erscheinungsjahr: 2017
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Geprüft | Bibliothek |
Inhaltszusammenfassung
Pesticide residues are frequently found in water bodies and may threaten freshwater ecosystems and biodiversity. In addition to runoff or leaching from treated agricultural fields, pesticides may enter streams via effluents from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). We compared the pesticide toxicity in terms of log maximum Toxic Unit (log mTU) of sampling sites in small agricultural streams of Germany with and without WWTPs in the upstream catchments. We found an ...Pesticide residues are frequently found in water bodies and may threaten freshwater ecosystems and biodiversity. In addition to runoff or leaching from treated agricultural fields, pesticides may enter streams via effluents from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). We compared the pesticide toxicity in terms of log maximum Toxic Unit (log mTU) of sampling sites in small agricultural streams of Germany with and without WWTPs in the upstream catchments. We found an approximately half log unit higher pesticide toxicity for sampling sites with WWTPs (p lt; 0.001). Compared to fungicides and insecticides, herbicides contributed most to the total pesticide toxicity in streams with WWTPs. A few compounds (diuron, terbuthylazin, isoproturon, terbutryn and Metazachlor) dominated the herbicide toxicity. Pesticide toxicity was not correlated with upstream distance to WWTP (Spearmans rank correlation, rho = 8722; 0.11, p gt; 0.05) suggesting that other context variables are more important to explain WWTP- driven pesticide toxicity. Our results suggest that WWTPs contribute to pesticide toxicity in German streams.» weiterlesen» einklappen