TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustainable micropollutant bioremediation via stormwater biofiltration system
AU - LeviRam, I.
AU - Gross, A.
AU - Lintern, A.
AU - Henry, R.
AU - Schang, C.
AU - Herzberg, M.
AU - McCarthy, D.
N1 - Funding Information:
The study was funded by Monash Ben-Gurion Seed Fund, and the Pratt Foundation Fellowship granted to I.L. The active support from Anthony Brosinsky, Tong Liu, Corrie Thirkell, Penelope Galbraith, and other EPHM lab crew is gratefully acknowledged. We also wish to acknowledge Micromon Genomics for the DNA quantitation. In addition, we wish to acknowledge the reviewers for their constructive comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/5/1
Y1 - 2022/5/1
N2 - Waters contaminated with micropollutants are of environmental and public health concern globally. Stormwater is a significant source of anthropogenic micropollutants to receiving waters. Hence, sustainable stormwater remediation is needed to reduce contamination of waterways. Yet designing sustainable bioremediation solutions, including those targeted to remove micropollutants, is a major scientific challenge. This study aimed to adapt the design of stormwater biofiltration systems, to improve the removal of micropollutants and understand the role of the micropollutant-degrading bacteria in this bioremediation process. We investigated the atrazine removal performance of a prototype biofiltration system, in which the filter media was supplemented with Granulated Activated Carbon (GAC). The prototype biofiltration system completely removed atrazine to below detectable limits, significantly exceeding the GAC's adsorption capacity alone, suggesting other biological processes were present. We showed that atrazine degradation capacity, measured by the kinetics of the trzN gene abundance, was accelerated in the prototype system compared to the standard system (which had no added GAC; 0.8 vs. 0.37 week−1, respectively). Notably, this high level of atrazine removal did not come at the expense of the removal performance of other typical stormwater macropollutants (e.g., nutrients, suspended solids). The prototype biofiltration system showed a proof-of-concept of sustaining microbial remediation of a model micropollutant alongside stormwater macropollutants, which could be used to reduce impacts on receiving waterways and protect our ecosystems and human health.
AB - Waters contaminated with micropollutants are of environmental and public health concern globally. Stormwater is a significant source of anthropogenic micropollutants to receiving waters. Hence, sustainable stormwater remediation is needed to reduce contamination of waterways. Yet designing sustainable bioremediation solutions, including those targeted to remove micropollutants, is a major scientific challenge. This study aimed to adapt the design of stormwater biofiltration systems, to improve the removal of micropollutants and understand the role of the micropollutant-degrading bacteria in this bioremediation process. We investigated the atrazine removal performance of a prototype biofiltration system, in which the filter media was supplemented with Granulated Activated Carbon (GAC). The prototype biofiltration system completely removed atrazine to below detectable limits, significantly exceeding the GAC's adsorption capacity alone, suggesting other biological processes were present. We showed that atrazine degradation capacity, measured by the kinetics of the trzN gene abundance, was accelerated in the prototype system compared to the standard system (which had no added GAC; 0.8 vs. 0.37 week−1, respectively). Notably, this high level of atrazine removal did not come at the expense of the removal performance of other typical stormwater macropollutants (e.g., nutrients, suspended solids). The prototype biofiltration system showed a proof-of-concept of sustaining microbial remediation of a model micropollutant alongside stormwater macropollutants, which could be used to reduce impacts on receiving waterways and protect our ecosystems and human health.
KW - Adsorption-biodegradation
KW - Atrazine
KW - Bioaugmentation
KW - Ecological engineering
KW - Micropollutants
KW - Stormwater management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125262952&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118188
DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118188
M3 - Article
C2 - 35235884
AN - SCOPUS:85125262952
SN - 0043-1354
VL - 214
JO - Water Research
JF - Water Research
M1 - 118188
ER -