4.7 Article

Fate and impact of wastewater-borne micropollutants in lettuce and the root-associated bacteria

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 831, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154674

Keywords

Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCP); Treated wastewater; Plant uptake; Microbial ecotoxicology; Plant growth-promoting bacteria

Funding

  1. EU through the WaterJPI-2015 AWARE project [PCIN-2017-067]
  2. German Federal Office for Agriculture and Food (Deutsches Bundesamt fur Landwirtschaft und Ernahrung BLE) [2816ERA04W]

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This study assessed the uptake and metabolization of pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) from treated wastewater into lettuce, as well as the impact on root-associated bacteria. The results showed that lettuce irrigated with treated wastewater had higher PPCP concentrations. Furthermore, irrigation with wastewater significantly affected microbial diversity and the structure and composition of root-associated bacteria.
The reuse of water for agricultural practices becomes progressively more important due to increasing demands for a transition to a circular economy. Treated wastewater can be an alternative option of blue water used for the irrigation of crops but its risks need to be evaluated. This study assesses the uptake and metabolization of pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) derived from treated wastewater into lettuce as well as the impact on root-associated bacteria under a realistic and worst-case scenario. Lettuce was grown in a controlled greenhouse and irrigated with water or treated wastewater spiked with and without a mixture of fourteen different PPCPs at 10 mu g/L or 100 mu g/L. After harvesting the plants, the same soil was reused for a consecutive cultivation campaign to test for the accumulation of PPCPs. Twelve out of fourteen spiked PPCPs were detected in lettuce roots, and thirteen in leaves. In roots, highest concentrations were measured for sucralose, sulfamethoxazole and citalopram, while sucralose, acesulfame and carbamazepine were the highest in leaves. Higher PPCP concentrations were found in lettuce roots irrigated with spiked treated wastewater than in those irrigated with spiked water. The absolute bacterial abundance remained stable over both cultivation campaigns and was not affected by any of the treatments (type of irrigation water (water vs. wastewater) nor concentration of PPCPs). However, the irrigation of lettuce with treated wastewater had a significant effect on the microbial alpha-diversity indices at the end of the second cultivation campaign, and modified the structure and community composition of root-associated bacteria at the end of both campaigns. Five and fourteen bacterial families were shown to be responsible for the observed changes at the end of the first and second cultivation campaign, respectively. Relative abundance of Haliangium and the clade Allorhizobium-Neorhizobium-Pararhizobium-Rhizobium was significantly affected in response to PCPPs exposure. Caulobacter, Cellvibrio, Hydrogenophaga and Rhizobacter were significantly affected in microcosms irrigated with wastewater.

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