4.7 Article

Strategies to evaluate biodegradability: application to chlorinated herbicides

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 16, Pages 9445-9452

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-013-2130-y

Keywords

Biodegradability; Herbicides; Respirometry; SBR; SB-MBR; Zahn-Wellens

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [CTM2010-15682, CTQ2008-03988]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion

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The biodegradability of nitrochlorinated (diuron and atrazine) and chlorophenoxy herbicides (2,4-D and MCPA) has been studied through several bioassays using different testing times and biomass/substrate ratios. A fast biodegradability test using unacclimated activated sludge yielded no biodegradation of the herbicides in 24 h. The inherent biodegradability test gave degradation percentages of around 20-30 % for the nitrochlorinated herbicides and almost complete removal of the chlorophenoxy compounds. Long-term biodegradability assays were performed using sequencing batch reactor (SBR) and sequencing batch membrane bioreactor (SB-MBR). Fixed concentrations of each herbicide below the corresponding EC50 value for activated sludge were used (30 mg L-1 for diuron and atrazine and 50 mg L-1 for 2,4-D and MCPA). No signs of herbicide degradation appeared before 35 days in the case of diuron and atrazine and 21 days for 2,4-D, whereas MCPA was partially degraded since the early stages. Around 25-36 % degradation of the nitrochlorinated herbicides and 53-77 % of the chlorophenoxy ones was achieved after 180 and 135 days, respectively, in SBR, whereas complete disappearance of 2,4-D was reached after 80 days in SB-MBR.

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