Title of article :
An assessment of estrogenic organic contaminants in
Canadian wastewaters
Author/Authors :
Marc P. Fernandez، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Michael G. Ikonomou، نويسنده , , Ian Buchanan a، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
A suite of 30 primarily estrogenic organic wastewater contaminants was measured in several influent/effluent wastewater
samples from four municipal wastewater treatment plants and effluents from one bleached kraft pulp mill (BKME) using an ultratrace
analytical method based on gas chromatography–high resolution mass spectroscopy (GC–HRMS). In vitro recombinant yeast
assay detection of the estrogenic equivalent (EEq) on whole and solid phase extracted (SPE) and fractionated wastewater was also
performed. 19-Norethindrone was the most frequently detected and abundant (26–224 ng/L) of all the synthetic estrogens/
progesterones in the influent samples. 17α-Ethinylestradiol was the more frequently detected synthetic estrogen/progesterone in the
effluents occurring at or below 5 ng/L with some sporadic occurrences of up to 178 ng/L. The greatest levels of steroidal estrogens
in municipal effluents were E1>E2>E3 which were all <20 ng/L. Nonylphenol and di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate were found to be the
highest non-steroidal synthetic compounds surveyed in both municipal influent and effluent samples, both occurring at 6–7 μg/L in
municipal effluents. BKME contained relatively large amounts of the plant sterol stigmasterol (4 μg/L) but low amounts of fecal
sterols, and steroidal estrogens (E2 only at 6 ng/L) when compared to the municipal effluents.
In vitro EEq in the wastewater surveyed ranged from 9–106 ng E2/L and ranked from municipal influent>municipal
effluent≈BKME, with most of the estrogenicity fractionating in the 100% methanol SPE fraction followed by a secondary amount
in the diethyl ether (for municipal) or methyl-tert butyl ether (for BKME) SPE fractions. Most correlations between chemical and
in vitro estrogenic equivalency were weak (p>0.05 in most cases). Unexpected inverse correlations between in vitro estrogenic
activity and concentrations of the estrogenic contaminant bisphenol Awere found which likely contributed to the weakness of these
correlations.
A modified toxicity identification and evaluation procedure was continued with the SPE extracts from the more potent 100%
methanol SPE fractions of municipal effluent. High performance liquid chromatography band elution retention times, based on in
vitro estrogen detection, indicated that steroidal estrogens such as E2 were responsible for most of the estrogenicity of the samples.
Subsequent collection and GC–MS analysis of active bands did not confirm the presence of steroidal estrogens, but expanded the
possibility of phthalate esters (i.e. dibutyl phthalate) and natural sterols (i.e. β-sitosterol) contributing to the overall estrogenic load.
Keywords :
in vitro , Wastewater , GC–HRMS , OWCs , estrogen
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment