4.5 Article

PYRETHROID INSECTICIDES IN MUNICIPAL WASTEWATER

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages 2460-2468

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/etc.2338

Keywords

Pyrethroid; Sewage treatment; Municipal wastewater; Hyalella azteca

Funding

  1. Sacramento County Regional Sanitation District
  2. California Department of Pesticide Regulation

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Pyrethroids are widely used insecticides, but minimal information has been published on their presence in municipal wastewater in the United States. Pyrethroids in wastewater from the Sacramento, California, USA, area consisted of permethrin, bifenthrin, cypermethrin, and cyhalothrin, with a combined concentration of 200ng/L to 500ng/L. Sampling within the wastewater collection system leading to the treatment plant suggested pyrethroids did not originate primarily from urban runoff, but could be from any of several drain disposal practices. Wastewater from residential areas was similar in pyrethroid composition and concentration to that from the larger metropolitan area as a whole. Secondary treatment removed approximately 90% of pyrethroids, but those remaining exceeded concentrations acutely toxic to sensitive species. Toxicity to the amphipod, Hyalella azteca, was consistently evident in the final effluent. The large river into which this particular plant discharged provided sufficient dilution such that pyrethroids were undetected in the river, and there was only slight toxicity of unknown cause in 1 river sample, but effects in receiving waters elsewhere will be site-specific. Environ Toxicol Chem 2013;32:2460-2468. (c) 2013 SETAC

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