6533b7d6fe1ef96bd126680d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Pharmaceuticals in settleable particulate material in urban and non-urban waters
Aimo OikariMarja Lahtisubject
Geologic SedimentsEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesista1172Waste Disposal FluidParticulate materialEnvironmental ChemistryEffluentFinlandSuspended solidsfungiPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEnvironmental engineeringWaterSedimentGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistrySedimentationPollutionPharmaceutical PreparationsWastewaterEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental scienceSewage treatmentWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Monitoringdescription
Abstract Wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) are important sources of settleable particulate material (SPM), heading to sediments with natural suspended solids. To date, there is little information about the fate of pharmaceuticals in sediment systems. In this study, the objective was to determine if pharmaceuticals are detected in SPM at locations near WWTPs or even in rural areas, thus being susceptible for sedimentation. SPM samples were collected from 10 sites in Finland, grouped as reference, rural and wastewater effluent sites. SPM collectors were placed about 35 cm above bottom for about 2 months during summer. After extraction, a set of 17 pharmaceuticals was analyzed. Several pharmaceuticals were detected in SPM accumulated at sites next to WWTPs. The concentration of citalopram was notably high (300–1350 ng g −1 dw). Also bisoprolol and ciprofloxacin were detected at high concentrations (6–325 and 9–390 ng g −1 dw, respectively). In contrast, none of the pharmaceuticals were detected from reference sites and only two were found from a single rural site. There is no previous information about the presence of pharmaceuticals in SPM. The results showed that pharmaceuticals are sorbed to particles in WWTP and nearby, eventually ending up in sediments. These results also indicate that pharmaceuticals are not markedly contaminating sediments of rural areas in Finland.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-03-24 | Chemosphere |