| Literature DB >> 22312266 |
Zhen Mao1, Xiao-Fei Zheng1, Yan-Qiu Zhang1, Xiu-Xiang Tao2, Yan Li1, Wei Wang1.
Abstract
Nonylphenol (NP) is an ultimate degradation product of nonylphenol polyethoxylates (NPE) that is primarily used in cleaning and industrial processes. Its widespread use has led to the wide existence of NP in various environmental matrices, such as water, sediment, air and soil. NP can be decreased by biodegradation through the action of microorganisms under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. Half-lives of biodegradation ranged from a few days to almost one hundred days. The degradation rate for NP was influenced by temperature, pH and additions of yeast extracts, surfactants, aluminum sulfate, acetate, pyruvate, lactate, manganese dioxide, ferric chloride, sodium chloride, hydrogen peroxide, heavy metals, and phthalic acid esters. Although NP is present at low concentrations in the environment, as an endocrine disruptor the risks of long-term exposure to low concentrations remain largely unknown. This paper reviews the occurrence of NP in the environment and its aerobic and anaerobic biodegradation in natural environments and sewage treatment plants, which is essential for assessing the potential risk associated with low level exposure to NP and other endocrine disruptors.Entities:
Keywords: biodegradation; endocrine disruptors; nonylphenol; occurrence; water
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22312266 PMCID: PMC3269700 DOI: 10.3390/ijms13010491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Nonylphenol (NP) levels in surface water and sediment samples.
| NP levels | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surface water (μg/L) | Sediment (μg/kg) | Location | Detected time | Reference |
| 0.034–0.599 | 38.4–863.0 | Lanzhou Reach of Yellow River, China | July and November 2004 | [ |
| NA-0.53 | LOD-79 | Llobregat basin, Spain | 2005–2006 | [ |
| 0.112 | 266 | Thermaiko Gulf, Greece | [ | |
| 0.227 | - | Loudias River, Greece | [ | |
| <LOD-310 | - | Kaoping River and its tributaries, Taiwan | July 2004–December 2005 | [ |
| 0.075–1.520 | - | Jialu River, China September | 2007 | [ |
| 0.266 ± 0.028 | - | Yeongsan and Seomjin rivers, Southern Korea | 2008 | [ |
| 0.043 ± 0.005 | - | Ton River in Souan Mone, Pear Lart and Park Ton, Laos | 2008 | [ |
| < LOD | - | Siem Reap River, Chong Srok area, Cambodia | 2008 | [ |
| 2.097 ± 0.212 | - | Long Xuyen city and nearby area, Vietnam | 2008 | [ |
| 0.372 ± 0.040 | - | Fenhe River, China | 2008 | [ |
| 0.039 ± 0.005 | - | Cikamasan, Cisarua, Indonesia | 2008 | [ |
| 0.918 ± 0.103 | - | Khong River, Thailand | 2008 | [ |
| 0.814 ± 0.089 | - | Tuaran, Salut River area, Malaysia | 2008 | [ |
| <0.029–0.195 | - | Glatt River, Switzerland | September 2006 | [ |
| 1.94–32.85 | 3,540–32,430 | Wuhan urban lakes, China | October 2005 | [ |
| <0.1–1.4 | 44–567 | Rieti district, Italy | 2002, 2003 | [ |
| 0–0.24 | - | Danube River | August–September 2007 | [ |
| 0–1.40 | - | Tributaries of Danube River | August–September 2007 | [ |
| - | <20–2,830 | Danube River | 2007 | [ |
| <0.029–0.233 | - | Ria de Aveiro, Portugal | August 2006 | [ |
| LOD-0.015 | LOD-1,750 | Great Lakes coastal wetland, Cootes Paradise, Canada | 2001, 2002 | [ |
| 75.2–179.6 | 5,460–119,100 | Lake Donghu, China | April 2003 | [ |
| 0.036–33.231 | - | Pearl River Delta, China | 2005, 2006 | [ |
| 0.152–13.757 | - | Thessaloniki, Greece | 2005–2006 | [ |
| 0.015–0.386 | - | Seine River Estuary, France | 2002–2004 | [ |
| <LOD-0.770 | - | Hessisches Ried region, Germany | 2003–2006 | [ |
| <LOD-0.511 | - | Donggang River, Taiwan | 2002 | [ |
| 0.1–0.5 | 75–340 | Cuyahoga River, Ohio, USA | [ | |
| <0.210 | <350 | Minnesota lakes, USA | 2008 | [ |
| 0.068–0.326 | - | Glatt River, Switzerland | 2004 | [ |
| - | 107–16,198 | Pearl River system, China | 2006–2007 | [ |
| - | 13–225 | Bay of Cadiz, Spain | 2002 | [ |
| - | 31–21,885 | Pearl River Delta, China | 2006–2007 | [ |
| 3.1 | Dianchi Lake, China | [ | ||
| <LOD-1,364 | Upper Danube River | 2006 | [ | |
| 47–192 | Venice lagoon, Italy | 2001–2002 | [ | |
LOD: Detection limit. NA: not analyzed.
NP levels in air.
| NP levels (ng/m3) | Location | Detected time | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gas | Aerosol | |||
| 19.2 (1.5–69) | 6.1 (0.1–14) | Hudson River Estuary, USA | ||
| 10.2 (0.9–56) | 9.8 (0.3–51) | Sandy Hook, USA | June–October, 1998 | [ |
| 2.5 (0.2–8.1) | 5.6 (1.8–23) | Liberty Science Center, USA | ||
| 6.9 (nd-56) | 5.4 (0.067–51) | Sandy Hook, USA | ||
| 2.6 (nd-17) | 3.8 (0.23–23) | Liberty Science Center, USA | June–December 1998 | [ |
| 13 (0.13–81) | 0.55 (0.020–6.4) | New Brunswick, USA | ||
| 1.60–16.5 | - | Urban site of Thessaloniki, Greece | January–February 2007 | [ |
| 0.15–1.0 | 0.0017–0.117 | NE-Bavaria, Germany | May–November 2001 | [ |
| 0.22 (0.055–0.42) | 0.040 (0.010–0.12) | GKSS Research Centre, Germany | - | |
| 0.056 (0.029–0.11) | 0.010 (0.005–0.017) | North Sea | - | [ |
| About 0.01–0.1 | - | North Sea | February–March 2004 | [ |