Abstract
The environmental occurrence, fate and ecotoxicity of emerging contaminants (ECs) has been the subject of increasing research, policy and public concern over the past two decades. While a wide range of publications have examined the environmental persistence and sediment/soil interactions of ECs following their discharge into aquatic environments, the extent to which ECs are sequestered in estuarine sediments, and the impact of this on their environmental persistence and supply to the ocean, in comparison remains unclear. This Article examines the environmental concentrations of seven, relatively water-soluble and environmentally mobile, ECs (including pharmaceuticals, perfluoroalkyl compounds, and plasticisers) in dated intertidal saltmarsh cores from two contrasting estuarine sites in the southern U.K. (one heavily urbanised/industrial, the other non-urbanised). Mean sediment EC concentrations are similar in both estuarine systems (in the range 0.1 (acetaminophen) to 17 (4-hydroxyacetophenone) ng/g dry weight). Despite their variable reported Log Kow values (from ca. 0.5 to > 7), the ECs are all apparently mobile in the marsh systems studied, and where subsurface concentration maxima are present these most likely relate to local flushing or diffusive processes and cannot be clearly linked to likely input trends or changes in sediment geochemistry (including sedimentary organic carbon content). The ‟estuarine filter” here, at least with respect to intertidal saltmarsh sediments, shows reduced potential to sequester the seven ECs examined and mediate their supply to coastal and shelf environments.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 116610 |
| Journal | Water Research |
| Volume | 189 |
| Early online date | 12 Nov 2020 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Feb 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Note: This work was supported by the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT), Mexico through the scholarship program [No 209683] and UK Research and Innovation [Global Challenges Research Fund].Impact: Estuaries, and estuarine sediments, play an important role in mediating the transfer of a range of organic and inorganic contaminants to the ocean through the action of the so-called ‟estuarine filter”, where elements and compounds are sequestered in fine intertidal and subtidal sediments and thus prevented from directly entering marine environments. We study the fate of relatively polar emerging contaminants (ECs) in estuaries, the extent to which ECs are removed and sequestered in estuarine sediments, and the impact of this on their degradation and environmental persistence.
Keywords
- Chemistry
- emerging contaminants
- estuary.
- perfluorinated compounds
- pharmaceuticals
- plasticisers
- saltmarsh