4.7 Article

Quantifying the contribution rates of sulfonamide antibiotics removal mechanisms in constructed wetlands using multivariate statistical analysis*

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
卷 292, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.118463

关键词

Antibiotics; Subsurface flow constructed wetlands; Removal; Effect; Path analysis

资金

  1. Strategic Priority Research Pro-gram of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA23030203]
  2. National Key Research and Development Project of China [Y8E0821B10]

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The study determined the contribution rates of substrate adsorption, hydrolysis, and microbial degradation in subsurface flow constructed wetlands for antibiotic removal through experiments and statistical analysis. Microbial degradation was found to be the main contributor to antibiotic removal in these wetlands.
The removal of antibiotics in subsurface flow constructed wetlands is performed through various removal mechanisms, such as adsorption, hydrolysis, microbial degradation and plant uptake. However, the contribution rates of the removal mechanisms in constructed wetlands are still not well studied. This study conducted a series of experiments and used multivariate statistical analysis to determine contribution rates for substrate adsorption, hydrolysis, and microbial degradation. Multiple stepwise regression analysis indicated that specific surface area and salt content were the main factors influencing sulfonamide adsorption, while temperature and pH were the main factors influencing sulfonamide hydrolysis. Variance partitioning analysis showed that the influence of physical-chemical factors was greater than that of nutrients on the microbial community. Partial least squares path analysis showed that the path coefficients of microbial degradation, adsorption and hydrolysis for sulfonamides removal in vertical subsurface flow constructed wetlands were 0.6339, 0.3608 and 0.0351, respectively, while the corresponding path coefficient were 0.5658, 0.4707 and 0.1079 in horizontal subsurface flow constructed wetlands, respectively. This means that microbial degradation contributes the most to the removal of sulfonamides in subsurface flow constructed wetlands. Enhanced microbial degradation may be a powerful measure to improve the removal of sulfonamides. These results will be helpful for understanding the removal mechanism of antibiotics and will provide a definite direction for pertinently improving sulfonamide removal efficiency in constructed wetlands.

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