6533b86efe1ef96bd12cb4da
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Modelling the removal and reversible immobilization of murine noroviruses in a Phaeozem under various contamination and rinsing conditions
Line CapowiezVincent TessonA. De RougemontPierre Renaultsubject
viruses0208 environmental biotechnologyved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesSoil Science02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural scienceslaw.inventionsoilAdsorptionlawPhaeozemFreundlich equationFiltration0105 earth and related environmental sciencesChemistryved/biologyContaminationwastewater reusesimulation6. Clean waterenteric virusvirus fate020801 environmental engineeringEnvironmental chemistry[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virologygeochemical changesSaturation (chemistry)GroundwaterMurine norovirusdescription
International audience; Enteric viruses entering the soil with contaminated irrigation water can reach groundwater or be internalized in plants through their roots without being inactivated. Their fate in the soil depends on the virus, the soil and the soil solution. In order to write a mathematical model suitable for a Calcaric Phaeozem, we investigated the removal of murine norovirus and reversible immobilization in aggregate columns according to a saturation procedure, conditions between contamination and rinsing time, temperature and soil solution. Viruses were quantified before and after 0.45‐μm filtration with an RT‐qPCR (real‐time polymerase chain reaction). Experimental results supported a model that combined free and colloidal transport of viruses in mobile water, exchange of free viruses between mobile and immobile water, virus removal and reversible virus adsorptions on suspended colloids, the outer aggregate surface and the inner aggregate particles. For an artificial soil solution at 20°C, the fate of viruses in contaminations lasting 1 to 7 days followed by 7 hours of rinsing was described by combining 0.38 log10 daily removal and weak reversible immobilization using a Freundlich adsorption isotherm (kF = 1120, nF = 1.53), which explained why free viruses prevailed in mobile water. Partial drying without aggregate desaturation did not affect virus recovery. Magnesium cation enrichment induced geochemical changes that faded over time, resulting in up to ten times more viruses adsorbed on suspended colloids than free and enhanced adsorption on outer aggregate surfaces. Likewise, groundwater rich in Mg2+ slowed remobilization. The fate of murine norovirus within a Calcaric Phaeozem can be described by a model that takes into account geochemical fluctuations.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-11-01 |