4.8 Article

Cross-Contamination of Residual Emerging Contaminants and Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria in Lettuce Crops and Soil Irrigated with Wastewater Treated by Sunlight/H2O2

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 18, Pages 11096-11104

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b02613

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. University of Salerno through Ph.D. grant (XIV Ciclo di Dottorato in Ingegneria Civile per l'Ambiente ed il Territorio)
  2. Transnational Access to Research Infrastructures within European project SFERA II under 7th Framework Program [312.643]
  3. EU-Switch Asia Programme under ZCR-2 project [DCI-ASIE/2013/334 140]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under WATER4CROPS project [CTQ2014-54563-C3-3]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The sunlight/H2O2 process has recently been considered as a sustainable alternative option compared to other solar driven advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) in advanced treatment of municipal wastewater (WW) to be reused for crop irrigation. Accordingly, in this study sunlight/ H2O2 was used as disinfection/oxidation treatment for urban WW treatment plant effluent in a compound parabolic collector photoreactor to assess subsequent cross-contamination of lettuce and soil by contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) (determined by QuEChERS extraction and LCQqLIT-MS/MS analysis) and antibiotic resistant (AR) bacteria after irrigation with treated WW. Three CECs (carbamazepine (CBZ), flumequine (FLU), and thiabendazole (TBZ) at 100 mu g L-1) and two AR bacterial strains (E. coli and E. faecalis, at 105 CFU mL(-1)) were spiked in real WW. A detection limit (DL) of 2 CFU mL(-1) was reached after 120 min of solar exposure for AR E. coli, while AR E. faecalis was more resistant to the disinfection process (240 min to reach DL). CBZ and TBZ were poorly removed after 90 min (12% and 50%, respectively) compared to FLU (94%). Lettuce was irrigated with treated WW for 5 weeks. CBZ and TBZ were accumulated in soil up to 472 ng g(-1) and 256 ng g(-1) and up-taken by lettuce up to 109 and 18 ng respectively, when 90 min treated WW was used for irrigation; whereas no bacteria contamination was observed when the bacterial density in treated WW was below the DL. A proper treatment time (>90 min) should be guaranteed in order to avoid the transfer of pathogens from disinfected WW to irrigated crops and soil.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available