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1.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 29(29): 43966-43983, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35124778

ABSTRACT

Agricultural pesticides transported to surface waters pose a major risk for aquatic ecosystems. Modelling studies indicate that the inlets of agricultural storm drainage systems can considerably increase the connectivity of surface runoff and pesticides to surface waters. These model results have however not yet been validated with field measurements. In this study, we measured discharge and concentrations of 51 pesticides in four out of 158 storm drainage inlets of a small Swiss agricultural catchment (2.8 km2) and in the receiving stream. For this, we performed an event-triggered sampling during 19 rain events and collected plot-specific pesticide application data. Our results show that agricultural storm drainage inlets strongly influence surface runoff and pesticide transport in the study catchment. The concentrations of single pesticides in inlets amounted up to 62 µg/L. During some rain events, transport through single inlets caused more than 10% of the stream load of certain pesticides. An extrapolation to the entire catchment suggests that during selected events on average 30 to 70% of the load in the stream was transported through inlets. Pesticide applications on fields with surface runoff or spray drift potential to inlets led to increased concentrations in the corresponding inlets. Overall, this study corroborates the relevance of such inlets for pesticide transport by establishing a connectivity between fields and surface waters, and by their potential to deliver substantial pesticide loads to surface waters.


Subject(s)
Pesticides , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Agriculture , Bays , Ecosystem , Pesticides/analysis , Switzerland , Water Movements , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
2.
Water Res ; 188: 116528, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33126003

ABSTRACT

Pesticide contamination of agricultural streams has widely been analysed in regions of high intensity agriculture such as in Western Europe or North America. The situation of streams subject to low intensity agriculture relying on human and animal labour, as in parts of Romania, remains unknown. To close this gap, we determined concentrations of 244 pesticides and metabolites at 19 low-order streams, covering sites from low to high intensity agriculture in a region of Romania. Pesticides were sampled with two passive sampling methods (styrene-divinylbenzene (SDB) disks and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) sheets) during three rainfall events and at base flow. Using the toxic unit approach, we assessed the toxicity towards algae and invertebrates. Up to 50 pesticides were detected simultaneously, resulting in sum concentrations between 0.02 and 37 µg L-1. Both, the sum concentration as well as the toxicities were in a similar range as in high intensity agricultural streams of Western Europe. Different proxies of agricultural intensity did not relate to in-stream pesticide toxicity, contradicting the assumption of previous studies. The toxicity towards invertebrates was positively related to large scale variables such as the catchment size and the agricultural land use in the upstream catchment and small scale variables including riparian plant height, whereas the toxicity to algae showed no relationship to any of the variables. Our results suggest that streams in low intensity agriculture, despite a minor reported use of agrochemicals, exhibit similar levels of pesticide pollution as in regions of high intensity agriculture.


Subject(s)
Pesticides , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Agriculture , Animals , Environmental Monitoring , Europe , Invertebrates , Pesticides/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
4.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 411(14): 3151-3164, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31011779

ABSTRACT

Insecticides such as pyrethroids and organophosphates are extensively used globally. Once released into surface water bodies, they can pose a major threat to aquatic ecosystems already at trace concentrations. Therefore, selected pyrethroids and organophosphates are listed as priority substances within the European Water Framework Directive with chronic quality criteria in the picogram per liter range. Previously applied analytical methods were unable to detect pyrethroids and organophosphates at ecotoxicological relevant concentrations, thereby hindering the assessment of surface water quality. In this work, we developed an ultra-sensitive method for the analysis of 12 pyrethroid and two organophosphate insecticides in surface waters. This method is based on the liquid-liquid extraction of surface water samples with n-hexane to achieve large enrichment factors (4000×) and subsequent chemical analysis by gas chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry using atmospheric pressure chemical ionization, a soft ionization technique. Quality control parameters including the method limits of quantification (12.5-125 pg L-1), intra-day precision (1-22%), intra-day accuracy (84-133%), and absolute recoveries covering liquid-liquid extraction (67-114%) showed that the method is sensitive and robust and therefore suitable for the analysis of pyrethroids and organophosphates in surface waters. The developed method was applied to Swiss surface water samples and detected pyrethroids and organophosphates below the ecotoxicological relevant concentrations, exemplifying the suitability of the proposed method for aquatic monitoring. Graphical abstract.

5.
Water Res ; 129: 486-498, 2018 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29190578

ABSTRACT

To protect the ecosystem and drinking water resources in Switzerland and in the countries of the downstream catchments, a new Swiss water protection act entered into force in 2016 aiming to reduce the discharge of micropollutants from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). As a consequence, selected WWTPs must be upgraded by an advanced treatment for micropollutant abatement with suitable and economic options such as (powdered) activated carbon treatment or ozonation. WWTP Neugut (105'000 people equivalent) was the first WWTP in Switzerland to implement a long-term full-scale ozonation. Differing specific ozone doses in the range of 0.35-0.97 g O3/g DOC were applied to determine the adequate ozone dose to fulfill the requirements of the Swiss water protection act. Based on this assessment, a specific ozone dose of 0.55 g O3/g DOC is recommended at this plant to ensure an average abatement of the twelve selected indicator substances by ≥80% over the whole treatment. A monitoring of 550 substances confirmed that this dose was very efficient to abate a broad range of micropollutants by >79% on average. After ozonation, an additional biological post-treatment is required to eliminate possible negative ecotoxicological effects generated during ozonation caused by biodegradable ozonation transformation products (OTPs) and oxidation by-products (OBPs). Three biological treatments (sand filtration, moving bed, fixed bed) and granular activated carbon (GAC, fresh and pre-loaded) filtration were evaluated as post-treatments after ozonation. In parallel, a fresh GAC filter directly connected to the effluent of the secondary clarifier was assessed. Among the three purely biological post-treatments, the sand filtration performed best in terms of removal of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), assimilable organic carbon (AOC) and total suspended solids (TSS). The fresh activated carbon filtration ensured a significant additional micropollutants abatement after ozonation due to sorption. The relative abatement of the indicator substances ranged between 20 and 89% after 27'000 bed volumes (BV) and was still substantial at 50'000 BV. In an identical GAC filter running in parallel and being fed with the effluent of the secondary clarifier, the elimination was less efficient. Seven primary OTPs (chlorothiazide and six N-oxides) formed during ozonation could be quantified thanks to available reference standards. Their concentration decreased with increasing specific ozone doses with the concomitant formation of other OTPs. The seven OTPs were found to be stable compounds and were not abated in the biological post-treatments. They were sorbed in the fresh GAC filter, but less efficiently than the corresponding parent compounds. Two OBPs, bromate (BrO3-) and N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), were formed during ozonation but did not exceeded 5 µg/L for bromate and 30 ng/L for NDMA at the recommended specific ozone dose of 0.55 g O3/g DOC. NDMA was well abated in all post-treatments (minimum 41% during fixed bed filtration, maximum 83% during fresh GAC filtration), while bromate was very stable as expected.


Subject(s)
Ozone/chemistry , Wastewater/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water Purification/methods , Bromates/chemistry , Dimethylnitrosamine/chemistry , Filtration , Oxidation-Reduction , Switzerland , Water , Water Pollutants, Chemical/chemistry , Water Purification/instrumentation
6.
J Hazard Mater ; 301: 443-52, 2016 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26410273

ABSTRACT

This study aimed at gaining knowledge on the degradation pathway during biological treatment of wastewater of diclofenac and 4'-hydroxydiclofenac, its main human metabolite. For that purpose, an aerobic MBR was acclimatised to diclofenac, and the MBR biomass subsequently incubated with (14)C-diclofenac or (14)C-4'hydroxydiclofenac over 25 days. It was demonstrated that diclofenac degradation was much slower and limited than that of 4'-hydroxydiclofenac. Indeed, after 18 days of batch incubation, diclofenac was removed up to 40%, this rate remained stable till the end of the experiment, while 4'-hydroxydiclofenac was completely degraded within nine days. The analyses of supernatant samples have shown that diclofenac degradation led to four transformation products, more polar than the parent compound, one of them being 4'-hydroxydiclofenac. The degradation of 4'-hydroxydiclofenac led to the formation of the same metabolites than those detected during diclofenac degradation. With these results, the hydroxylation of diclofenac to 4'-hydroxydiclofenac was identified as one major bottleneck in diclofenac degradation during biological treatment of wastewater.


Subject(s)
Bioreactors , Diclofenac/analogs & derivatives , Waste Disposal, Fluid , Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism , Biotransformation , Diclofenac/metabolism , Membranes, Artificial , Wastewater
7.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 29(19): 1789-94, 2015 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26331929

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: Dietary sterol deficiencies can have severe life history consequences for consumers. Compound-specific stable isotope analysis (CSIA) was applied to the exploration of the sterol metabolic constraints and bioconversion capacities of the amphipod Gammarus roeselii. Evaluating structural sterol requirements has great potential to improve our understanding of the ecological relevance of sterols as limiting nutrients. METHODS: Juvenile G. roeselii were reared on food mixtures consisting of different ratios of the two algae Scenedesmus obliquus (cultivated with (13)C-labeled NaHCO3) and Nannochloropsis limnetica (unlabeled), which have been shown previously to differ in food quality. We measured the sterol content and composition using a gas chromatograph equipped with a flame ionization detector and the δ(13)C values of sterols using compound-specific isotope ratio mass spectrometry to examine potential sterol-mediated nutritional constraints of G. roeselii. RESULTS: In the food mixtures, δ(13)C values of cholesterol, synthesized by N. limnetica, were -25‰ and those of the Δ(7)-phytosterols, chondrillasterol and fungisterol, synthesized by S. obliquus, were 7 and 18‰, respectively. Although the cholesterol concentrations in G. roeselii decreased with increasing proportion of dietary S. obliquus, the δ(13)C values remained constant at -25‰. Lathosterol, which appeared in G. roeselii at high dietary proportions of S. obliquus, had a δ(13)C value of 35‰. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence that the the Δ(7)-phytosterols present in S. obliquus cannot be metabolized to cholesterol in G. roeselii, resulting in the accumulation of lathosterol in the animals and potentially in sterol-limited growth. These findings emphasize the advantage of CSIA in revealing the physiological mechanisms associated with nutritional constraints.


Subject(s)
Amphipoda/metabolism , Amphipoda/physiology , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Cholesterol/analysis , Cholesterol/metabolism , Animals , Cholesterol/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Scenedesmus
8.
Bioethics ; 29(4): 233-40, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24654942

ABSTRACT

Recently, the debate on human enhancement has shifted from familiar topics like cognitive enhancement and mood enhancement to a new and - to no one's surprise - controversial subject, namely moral enhancement. Some proponents from the transhumanist camp allude to the 'urgent need' of improving the moral conduct of humankind in the face of ever growing technological progress and the substantial dangers entailed in this enterprise. Other thinkers express more sceptical views about this proposal. As the debate has revealed so far, there is no shared opinion among philosophers (or scientists) about the meaning, prospects, and ethical evaluation of moral enhancement. In this article I will address several conceptual and practical problems of this issue, in order to encourage discussion about the prospects of (thinking about) moral enhancement in the future. My assumption is that (i) for the short term, there is little chance of arriving at an agreement on the proper understanding of morality and the appropriateness of one single (meta-)ethical theory; (ii) apart from this, there are further philosophical puzzles loosely referred to in the debate which add to theoretical confusion; and (iii) even if these conceptual problems could be solved, there are still practical problems to be smoothed out if moral enhancement is ever to gain relevance apart from merely theoretical interest. My tentative conclusion, therefore, will be that moral enhancement is not very likely to be made sense of - let alone realized - in the medium-term future.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Enhancement , Emotions , Morals , Personal Autonomy , Social Values , Virtues , Biomedical Enhancement/ethics , Biomedical Enhancement/methods , Concept Formation , Ethical Analysis , Ethical Theory , Freedom , Humans , Metaphysics , Politics , Social Justice , Social Problems/ethics , Social Problems/prevention & control , Volition
9.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 76(3): 592-601, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21426363

ABSTRACT

The quality of heterotrophic bacteria as food for metazoan grazers has been investigated poorly. We conducted growth experiments with juvenile Daphnia magna feeding on different strains of heterotrophic bacteria that represent typical pelagic bacteria of five phylogenetically distinct groups. The bacterial food suspensions were supplemented with cholesterol and/or the polyunsaturated fatty acid eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), two essential nutrients that are either absent or scarcely represented in bacteria. Our data imply that the selected heterotrophic bacteria are of poor food quality for D. magna, which was indicated either by very low somatic growth rates or by high mortality. However, with four out of six bacterial strains tested, the somatic growth rates increased significantly upon supplementation with cholesterol, which shows that the lack of sterols in bacteria is a major food quality constraint. We did not find clear evidence for a limitation by EPA on bacterial diets within our growth experiments. High mortality was observed when D. magna was fed with Hydrogenophaga sp. or Pseudomonas sp., which indicates that these two bacterial strains are toxic to D. magna. Our findings highlight the limitations of bacteria as a carbon source for Daphnia and point to a so far underestimated diversity of interactions between grazers and its bacterial food.


Subject(s)
Bacteria , Daphnia/growth & development , Food Chain , Sterols/analysis , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Bacteria/classification , Carbon/metabolism , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/analysis , Heterotrophic Processes
10.
Ann Nutr Metab ; 46(6): 231-42, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12464722

ABSTRACT

Improvements in the understanding of human milk composition, in dietetic effects on physiological outcomes in infants, and in food technology have lead to modifications in infant formulas and other dietetic products for infants. In Europe, new ingredients may be added to infant formula and follow-on formulas if their suitability for particular use by infants from birth has been established by generally accepted scientific data. However, there is uncertainty as to the nature of the evaluation needed to evaluate whether modifications in dietetic products for infants can be regarded as suitable and safe. Moreover, there is no agreement on the nature of evidence required to justify the scientific validity of potential effects on infant health and well-being, which might provide the basis for the communication of such effects to health professionals and consumers. Therefore, a scientific workshop was held under the auspices of the Child Health Foundation, Munich, Germany, and the European Society for Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition to discuss issues arising in this area among participants representing academia, infant food industry, consumer organisations, the European Commission, and food regulatory bodies of some European Union member states. This article summarises the outcomes of this workshop. The participants agreed on general concepts of evaluation of innovations and on establishing evidence for benefits, but felt that further discussion would be necessary on the principles and practicalities involved in setting up a central register of clinical trials and of a central repository of trial data.


Subject(s)
Consumer Product Safety , Infant Food , Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Clinical Trials as Topic/standards , European Union , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Food Technology , Growth , Humans , Infant , Infant Food/analysis , Infant Food/standards , Infant, Newborn , Legislation, Food , Male , Milk, Human/chemistry , Product Surveillance, Postmarketing
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