| Literature DB >> 31838390 |
Olatz Pereda1, Libe Solagaistua2, Miren Atristain2, Ioar de Guzmán2, Aitor Larrañaga2, Daniel von Schiller2, Arturo Elosegi2.
Abstract
The ecological effects of wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents on stream ecosystems cause growing concern. However, it is difficult to assess these effects as most streams receiving WWTP effluents are also affected by other stressors. We performed a whole-ecosystem manipulation experiment following a BACI design (Before-After/Control-Impact) in order to exclude the influence of other potentially confounding factors. We diverted part of the effluent of a large tertiary urban WWTP into a small, unpolluted stream, and studied its effects on ecosystem structure and functioning over two years (i.e., one year before and one year after the effluent diversion). Although highly diluted (final concentration in the receiving stream averaged 3%), the effluent promoted biofilm chlorophyll-a and biomass (2.3 and 2.1 times, respectively), exo-enzymatic activities (phosphatase 2.2 and glucosidase 4.2 times) and invertebrate-mediated organic matter decomposition (1.4 times), but reduced phosphorus uptake capacity of the epilithic biofilm down to 0.5 of the initial values. Biofilm metabolism, reach-scale nutrient uptake and microbially-mediated organic matter decomposition were not affected. Our results indicate that even well treated and highly diluted WWTP effluents can also affect the structure of the biofilm community and stream ecosystem functioning.Entities:
Keywords: BACI; Ecosystem response; Ecosystem-level manipulation; Effluent dilution; Urban pollution; Wastewater treatment plant
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31838390 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.113719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071