4.7 Article

Compounds of emerging concern as new plant stressors linked to water reuse and biosolid application in agriculture

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jece.2021.105198

Keywords

Antibiotics; Pharmaceuticals; Wastewater treatment; Phytotoxicity; Stress response; Bioremediation

Funding

  1. PRIMA consortium of the European Union (DSWAP action) [1822]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and University [RTI2018-096175-B-I00]
  3. FONDAP (Chile) [ANID/FONDAP/15130015]
  4. Centre of Excellence Severo Ochoa (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation) [CEX2018000794S]
  5. ANID, Chile [Doctorado Nacional/201921191116]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Global crop production is limited by water, nitrogen, and phosphorous availability. The use of reclaimed water and organic fertilizers can help mitigate these needs, but they may contain pollutants from various sources. The PRIMA-DSWAP project aims to assess the risks associated with these practices and explore technical measures to minimize impacts, particularly focusing on the presence of emerging contaminants and their potential effects on crop performance and quality.
Global crop production is limited by water, nitrogen, and phosphorous availability. Reclaimed water and organic fertilizers, such as crop residues, animal manure, and biosolids, can mitigate these needs. However, these materials may contain different pollutants arising from, among others, human and veterinarian health care, industry, cleaning media, or leakages from plastics or textiles. The European PRIMA-DSWAP project deals with the risks derived from these practices in relation to the presence of the so-called contaminants of emerging concern, or CECs, while exploring possible technical and mitigation measures to minimize those impacts. Risk assessment analyses of the CEC presence in soils and water bodies have been mainly focused in their consequences for human and environmental health, but very little has been studied about their potential negative effects on crop performance and quality. Here we review the current knowledge on macroscopic and molecular plant responses to the presence of several CECs known to abound in reclaimed waters, manure, and biosolids, with particular emphasis on crop plants, when available. With this information, and with the analysis of the potential implications of scaling these effects to the commercial agricultural level, we intend to contribute to the ongoing debate on the water reuse and biosolid application in agriculture in the context of circular economy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available