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Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A
Toxic/Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering
Volume 53, 2018 - Issue 13
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Articles

Small but with big impact? Ecotoxicological effects of a municipal wastewater effluent on a small creek

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Pages 1149-1160 | Published online: 09 Jan 2019
 

Abstract

Municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) discharge micropollutants like pharmaceuticals, pesticides, personal care products or endocrine disrupting chemicals but also nutrients. Both can adversely influence the freshwater ecosystem and may finally affect the ecological conditions. Many studies focus on the potential impact of large WWTPs even if smaller ones are more common, often less efficient and discharge into small creeks or the upper reaches of rivers. As a result, the receiving waters are characterized by relatively high shares of treated wastewater. Thus, the primary objective of this study was to investigate the ecotoxicological effects of a small WWTP on freshwater amphipods and mollusks in a small creek using an active and passive monitoring approach, accompanied by laboratory experiments (LE). In vitro assays with recombinant yeasts and the microtox assay with Aliivibrio fischeri were performed in parallel to determine the endocrine potential and the baseline toxicity. The evaluation of the effects of the analysed WWTP was possible due to its shutdown during our study and the application of the same in vivo and in vitro assays before and after the shutdown. During the operation of the WWTP the discharge of treated wastewater caused significantly higher mortalities and lower reproduction of the anaylsed invertebrates in the active and passive montoring as well as in the LEs. Furthermore, the amphipod species assemblage in the creek was affected downstream of the WWTP effluent. Besides, the endocrine activity and baseline toxicity were significantly higher downstream of the effluent. After the shutdown of the WWTP, the in vitro activity levels and adverse in vivo effects in the receiving water recovered quickly with no significant differences downstream of the former WWTP effluent compared to the upstream station. Furthermore, the previously disturbed amphipod species assemblage recovered significantly with a shift in favor of Gammarus fossarum downstream of the effluent. These biological results are consistent with a marked decline by 81.5% for the detected micropollutants in the receiving creek after the shutdown which points to a prominent role of micropollutants for the observed effects.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Simone Ziebart for technical assistance. Our sincere thanks go also to Arne Wick from the Federal Institute of Hydrology (BfG) for the chemical analyses of micropollutants in the water samples.

Additional information

Funding

The authors thank the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) for funding (NiddaMan, project support code: 02WRM1367A). The NiddaMan project is part of the funding measures ReWaM (Regional water ressources management for sustainable water protection in Germany) and FONA (Investigations of sustainable development).

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