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Emerging Organic Contaminants in Groundwater Under a Rapidly Developing City (Patna) in Northern India Dominated by High Concentrations of Lifestyle Chemicals
- Source :
- Richards, L, Kumari, R, White, D, Parashar, N, Kumar, A, Ghosh, A, Kumar, S, Chakravorty, B, Lu, C, Civil, W, Lapworth, D J, Krause, S, Polya, D & Gooddy, D C 2020, ' Emerging Organic Contaminants in Groundwater Under a Rapidly Developing City (Patna) in Northern India Dominated by High Concentrations of Lifestyle Chemicals ', Environmental Pollution, vol. 268, no. A, 115765, pp. 115765 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115765
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Aquatic pollution from emerging organic contaminants (EOCs) is of key environmental importance in India and globally, particularly due to concerns of antimicrobial resistance, ecotoxicity and drinking water supply vulnerability. Here, using a broad screening approach, we characterize the composition and distribution of EOCs in groundwater in the Gangetic Plain around Patna (Bihar), as an exemplar of a rapidly developing urban area in northern India. A total of 73 EOCs were detected in 51 samples, typically at ng.L−1 to low μg.L−1 concentrations, relating to medical and veterinary, agrochemical, industrial and lifestyle usage. Concentrations were often dominated by the lifestyle chemical and artificial sweetener sucralose. Seventeen identified EOCs are flagged as priority compounds by the European Commission, World Health Organisation and/or World Organisation for Animal Health: namely, herbicides diuron and atrazine; insecticides imidacloprid, thiamethoxam, clothianidin and acetamiprid; the surfactant perfluorooctane sulfonate (and related perfluorobutane sulfonate, perfluorohexane sulfonate, perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluoropentane sulfonate); and medical/veterinary compounds sulfamethoxazole, sulfanilamide, dapson, sulfathiazole, sulfamethazine and diclofenac. The spatial distribution of EOCs varies widely, with concentrations declining with depth, consistent with a strong dominant vertical flow control. Groundwater EOC concentrations in Patna were found to peak within ∼10 km distance from the River Ganges, indicating mainly urban inputs with some local pollution hotspots. A heterogeneous relationship between EOCs and population density likely reflects confounding factors including varying input types and controls (e.g. spatial, temporal), wastewater treatment infrastructure and groundwater abstraction. Strong seasonal agreement in EOC concentrations was observed. Co-existence of limited transformation products with associated parent compounds indicate active microbial degradation processes. This study characterizes key controls on the distribution of groundwater EOCs across the urban to rural transition near Patna, as a rapidly developing Indian city, and contributes to the wider understanding of the vulnerability of shallow groundwater to surface-derived contamination in similar environments.
- Subjects :
- Pollution
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
endocrine system diseases
Agrochemical
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
media_common.quotation_subject
Water supply
India
010501 environmental sciences
Toxicology
01 natural sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
Ganga river basin
Animals
Atrazine
Cities
Groundwater
Life Style
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
media_common
business.industry
General Medicine
Emerging organic compounds
Water quality
chemistry
Environmental chemistry
Environmental science
Sewage treatment
Micropollutants
Ecotoxicity
business
Wastewater tracers
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Environmental Monitoring
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Richards, L, Kumari, R, White, D, Parashar, N, Kumar, A, Ghosh, A, Kumar, S, Chakravorty, B, Lu, C, Civil, W, Lapworth, D J, Krause, S, Polya, D & Gooddy, D C 2020, ' Emerging Organic Contaminants in Groundwater Under a Rapidly Developing City (Patna) in Northern India Dominated by High Concentrations of Lifestyle Chemicals ', Environmental Pollution, vol. 268, no. A, 115765, pp. 115765 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115765
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....149618ba0c1231bc082201e46a0b12bb