Testing for environmental contaminants in wastewater
biosolids
From: Ken Kingery, Duke University in ENN.com
Don Bousquet in URI Stormwater solutions |
Every
year waste treatment facilities in the United States process more than eight
million tons of semi-solid sewage called biosolids -- about half of which is
recycled into fertilizer and spread on crop land. The practice helps solve
storage issues and produces revenue to support the treatment plants, but what
else is being spread in that sludge?
As
industry invents new materials and chemicals for modern products, many find
their way to our skin and bloodstream and, subsequently, into our sinks and
toilet bowls. More than 500 different organic chemicals have been identified in
the biosolids used as fertilizer across the United States.
In
a recent study, Gunsch and colleagues from Duke's Pratt School of Engineering
describe a new, cost-effective method for screening chemicals for potential
environmental impact.
They have used the test to show that triclosan, an
antimicrobial agent currently under fire from environmentalists, has troubling
concentrations in the environment, and they raise suspicions about three other
commonly used antimicrobial products.
The
team describes their new testing method and some of its early findings in the
Feb. 4, 2014 Journal of Environmental Science & Technology.
"Because
we're finding many emerging contaminants in biosolids, we wanted to develop a
method where you could check them quickly and efficiently and flag the most
potentially dangerous ones for more complex measurements," said Ryan
Holzem, a graduate student in civil and environmental engineering at Duke and
first author on the study.
An
important benefit of fertilizing soil is replenishing nitrate levels, which are
crucial to growing plants. One indicator of the soil's health is the rate at
which native bacteria are breaking down those nitrates through a process called
denitrification. If antimicrobials or other chemical agents are affecting the
bacteria's ability to complete this process, the soil's quality is degraded.
The
new screening technique involves growing a bacterium commonly found in soil
that is important to the nitrogen cycle -- Paracoccus denitrificans -- in pure
laboratory cultures. Researchers then add various amounts of the
chemicals in question to determine the minimum amount that affects the
denitrification process.
Read
more at Duke
University.