| Literature DB >> 22465978 |
M Omirou1, P Dalias, C Costa, C Papastefanou, A Dados, C Ehaliotis, D G Karpouzas.
Abstract
The high wastewater volumes produced during citrus production at pre- and post-harvest level presents serious pesticide point-source pollution for groundwater bodies. Biobeds are used for preventing such point-source pollution occurring at farm level. We explored the potential of biobeds for the depuration of wastewaters produced through the citrus production chain following a lab-to-field experimentation. The dissipation of pesticides used pre- or post-harvest was studied in compost-based biomixtures, soil, and a straw-soil mixture. A biomixture of composted grape seeds and skins (GSS-1) showed the highest dissipation capacity. In subsequent column studies, GSS-1 restricted pesticides leaching even at the highest water load (462 Lm(-3)). Ortho-phenylphenol was the most mobile compound. Studies in an on-farm biobed filled with GSS-1 showed that pesticides were fully retained and partially or fully dissipated. Overall biobeds could be a valuable solution for the depuration of wastewaters produced at pre- and post-harvest level by citrus fruit industries.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22465978 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2012.03.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071