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Micropollutants in Large Lakes: From Potential Pollution Sources to Risk Assessments PDF

314 Pages·2017·7.45 MB·English
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Micropollutants in Large Lakes From Potential Pollution to Risk Assessments Micropollutants in Large Lakes From Potential Pollution to Risk Assessments Editors Nathalie Chèvre, Andrew Barry, Florence Bonvin, Neil Graham, Jean-Luc Loizeau, Hans-Rudolf Pfeifer, Luca Rossi, Torsten Vennemann Distributed by CRC Press Taylor and Francis Group, LLC 6000 Broken Sound Parkway, NW, Suite 300, Boca Raton, FL 33487 Distribution and Customer Service [email protected] www.crcpress.com Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. The publisher and authors express their thanks to the Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) for its generous support towards the publication of this book. With the support of the Société académique vaudoise and the Fonds national suisse de la recherche scientifique (FNS). Cover photography: © Jeremy Bishop – www.unsplash.com The EPFL Press is the English-language imprint of the Foundation of the Presses polytechniques et universitaires romandes (PPUR). The PPUR mainly publishes works of teaching and research of the Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), of universities and other institutions of higher education. Presses polytechniques et universitaires romandes, EPFL – Rolex Learning Center, Post office box 119, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland E-mail: [email protected] Phone: +41 21 693 21 30 Fax: +41 21 693 40 27 www.epflpress.org © 2018, First edition, EPFL Press ISBN 978-2-88914-428-0 All rights reserved (including those of translation into other languages). No part of this book may be reproduced in any form — by photoprint, microfilm, or any other means — nor transmitted or trans- lated into a machine language without written permission from the publisher. Table of content 1 Introduction 1.1 Lakes as a resource 3 1.2 Micropollutants in surface waters: a worldwide recognition of the issue 7 The history of organic chemistry 7 Chemical regulations 10 Chemical pollution of Lake Geneva: case of pesticides, pharmaceuticals and heavy metals 11 1.3 Book chapters 15 1.4 References 17 2 Agricultural sources of micropollutants: from the catchment to the lake 2.1 Agricultural sources of micropollutants of the catchment 23 2.1.1 Generalities 23 2.1.2 Pesticides: definitions, types and usages 24 2.1.3 Fate of pesticides in the environment 25 2.1.4 Environmental risk of pesticide use 30 2.2 Source and transport dynamics of glyphosate: a case study of Swiss vineyards 33 2.2.1 Introduction 33 2.2.2 Methodology 36 Study area 36 Field equipment 38 Chemical analysis 39 Risk assessment 40 2.2.3 Field results 41 Soil column and parcel level 41 Catchment level 43 Mass balance 44 Interactions with DOM 46 2.2.4 Risk assessment of glyphosate 49 2.3 Synthesis and conclusions 53 2.4 References 55 VI Micropollutants in Large Lakes 3 Urban sources of micropollutants: from the catchment to the lake 3.1 Introduction 63 3.2 Micropollutants found in urban waters 67 3.2.1 Surfactants 68 3.2.2 Pharmaceuticals 68 3.2.3 Personal care products 69 3.2.4 Household and industrial chemicals 71 3.2.5 Biocides and pesticides 76 3.2.6 Heavy metals 77 3.2.7 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons 78 3.2.8 Volatile organic compounds 79 3.3 Fate of micropollutants in WWTPs 81 3.3.1 Mechanisms of removal of micropollutants in conventional WWTPs 81 Sorption 83 Biological transformation 86 Volatilization 90 Abiotic degradation 90 3.3.2 Fate of selected classes of micropollutants in conventional WWTPs 91 Surfactants 92 Pharmaceuticals 92 Personal care products 94 Household and industrial chemicals 95 Biocides and POPs 96 PAHs and VOCs 96 Heavy metals 97 Synthesis and risk evaluation 98 3.3.3 Enhanced treatment of micropollutants in WWTPs 112 Optimization of conventional treatments 112 Improvement of hydrophobic pollutant removal 112 Improvement of biodegradable pollutant removal 113 Advanced treatments 114 Others technologies 119 Treatment of surface runoff water 120 3.4 Conclusions 123 3.5 References 125 Table of content VII 4 Currents of Lake Geneva 4.1 Introduction 143 4.2 Wind patterns on Lake Geneva 147 4.2.1 Description of wind data sets 147 4.2.2 k-means and hierarchical clustering 147 4.2.3 Procedure and results 148 4.3 Hydrodynamic modelling 151 4.3.1 Hydrodynamic modelling with Delft3D-Flow 151 4.3.2 Grand Lac flow patterns 152 Overview 152 Current circulations of Lake Geneva for different wind patterns 154 4.4 Vidy Bay current patterns 157 4.5 Transport of water within Lake Geneva based on the stable isotope compositional variations of water in Lake Geneva 161 4.5.1 Isotopes of water 161 4.5.2 Transport patterns of Rhône River water within Lake Geneva 164 4.6 Summary and conclusion 167 4.7 References 169 5 Occurrence, fate and ecotoxicological relevance of micropollutants in Vidy Bay 5.1 Introduction 175 5.2 The Vidy Bay – morphology and pollution source 177 5.3 Vidy Bay hydrodynamics 179 5.4 Spatio-temporal occurrence of micropollutants in Vidy Bay 181 5.4.1 Measured micropollutant concentrations in Vidy Bay 182 5.4.2 Measured micropollutant concentrations above the WWTP outfall 182 5.4.3 Conductivity as an indicator for elevated micropollutant concentrations above the WWTP outfall 186 5.5 Ecotoxicological risk associated with wastewater-derived micropollutants 189 5.6 Dilution and degradation processes affecting micropollutant concentrations in Vidy Bay 191 5.7 Modelling the micropollutant plume in Vidy Bay 195 5.7.1 Coupled hydrodynamic-photolysis model 196 5.7.2 Susceptibility towards direct and indirect photolysis processes 197 VIII Micropollutants in Large Lakes 5.7.3 Effect of sunlight on plume extension for representative compounds 199 5.7.4 Extent of ecotoxicological risk zone and contribution of photolysis to its attenuation 200 5.8 Environmental implications 205 5.9 References 207 6 Sediment-bound contaminant transport dynamics in and around Vidy Bay 6.1 Introduction 215 6.2 Hydrodynamics within the bay 217 6.3 Contaminant path tracing and sediment focusing 219 6.4 Colloid and aggregate characterisation 223 6.5 Vertical and lateral sedimentation pathways in Vidy Bay 229 6.5.1 Sediment accumulation and composition 236 6.5.2 Spatial and temporal radionuclide flux dynamics 238 6.5.3 Vertical sedimentation model with lateral component 239 6.6 Hydrodynamic conditions of Vidy Bay’s BBL 243 6.7 Conclusions 249 6.8 References 251 7 Mixture risk assessment of chemical: from the theory to the application 7.1 Introduction 261 7.2 Mixture effect assessment theory 265 7.2.1 Mixture effects models 265 7.2.2 Accuracy of the CA and IA models 268 7.2.3 Mixture risk assessment 269 7.3 Risk assessment of chemical mixtures in the Lake Geneva catchment 271 7.3.1 Lake Geneva, Rhône River and Vidy Bay 271 7.3.2 Limits of the mixture risk assessment approaches 275 7.4 Comparison with ecological data 279 7.5 Conclusion 283 7.6 References 287

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Scientists, regulators, and the general public are now more and more aware of the chemicals present in surface waters worldwide. Agrochemicals, such as herbicides or insecticides, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics can be detected at low to medium concentrations in seas, groundwaters and rivers. Among fr
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