| Literature DB >> 28401767 |
Paul M Bradley1, Celeste A Journey1, Kristin M Romanok2, Larry B Barber3, Herbert T Buxton4, William T Foreman5, Edward T Furlong5, Susan T Glassmeyer6, Michelle L Hladik7, Luke R Iwanowicz8, Daniel K Jones9, Dana W Kolpin10, Kathryn M Kuivila11, Keith A Loftin12, Marc A Mills6, Michael T Meyer12, James L Orlando7, Timothy J Reilly2, Kelly L Smalling2, Daniel L Villeneuve13.
Abstract
Surface water from 38 streams nationwide was assessed using 14 target-organic methods (719 compounds). Designed-bioactive anthropogenic contaminants (biocides, pharmaceuticals) comprised 57% of 406 organics detected at least once. The 10 most-frequently detected anthropogenic-organics included eight pesticides (desulfinylfipronil, AMPA, chlorpyrifos, dieldrin, metolachlor, atrazine, CIAT, glyphosate) and two pharmaceuticals (caffeine, metformin) with detection frequencies ranging 66-84% of all sites. Detected contaminant concentrations varied from less than 1 ng L-1 to greater than 10 μg L-1, with 77 and 278 having median detected concentrations greater than 100 ng L-1 and 10 ng L-1, respectively. Cumulative detections and concentrations ranged 4-161 compounds (median 70) and 8.5-102 847 ng L-1, respectively, and correlated significantly with wastewater discharge, watershed development, and toxic release inventory metrics. Log10 concentrations of widely monitored HHCB, triclosan, and carbamazepine explained 71-82% of the variability in the total number of compounds detected (linear regression; p-values: < 0.001-0.012), providing a statistical inference tool for unmonitored contaminants. Due to multiple modes of action, high bioactivity, biorecalcitrance, and direct environment application (pesticides), designed-bioactive organics (median 41 per site at μg L-1 cumulative concentrations) in developed watersheds present aquatic health concerns, given their acknowledged potential for sublethal effects to sensitive species and lifecycle stages at low ng L-1.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28401767 PMCID: PMC5695041 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b00012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028