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Bioavailability and Biodegradation of Aromatic Compounds in Sediments

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Characterization of dominant electron acceptor transitions due to benthic ... define risk (direct and food chain transport) of contaminated sediments ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bioavailability and Biodegradation of Aromatic Compounds in Sediments


1
Bioavailability and Biodegradation of Aromatic
Compounds in Sediments
  • Danny Reible, PhD, PE, DEE, NAE
  • Smith Chair of Environmental Health Engineering
  • University of Texas at Austin

4th Symposium on Biosorption and
Bioremediation August 27. 2007
2
Routes of Contaminant Exposure to Sediments
  • Direct flux to water
  • Sediment erosion
  • Bioturbation and surface release
  • Physicochemical processes
  • Accumulation in benthic organisms and food chain
    transfer
  • Conclusion - In stable (non-erosive environments)
    benthic organisms largely control contaminant
    release and exposure

3
Bioturbation
  • Normal life cycle activities of benthic organisms
    leading to sediment mixing and transport
  • Dominated by deposit feeders that ingest sediment
    e.g. freshwater oligochaetes
  • Densities up to 100,000 worms/m2 or more
  • Organisms may process 10-20 times their wt/day
  • Controls depth of sediments leading to exposure
  • Controls rate of sediment reworking, sediment
    redox conditions and porewater release of
    contaminants
  • Bioturbation may lead to degradation via organism
    metabolism
  • Bioavailability largely defined by what can be
    moved or metabolized by or accumulate in benthic
    organisms

4
The Bioturbation/Soluble Release Process
5
Current work on biodegradation in sediments
  • Characterization of dominant electron acceptor
    transitions due to benthic organism activity
    using sub-mm resolution voltammetry
  • Characterization of microbial community changes
    in response to dominant electron acceptor
    transitions
  • Special focus on chlorinated benzenes
  • Dechlorination of multi-chlorinated benzenes
    under strongly reducing conditions
  • Oxidation of monochlorobenzene in transitional
    and aerobic zone created by benthic organisms
  • This lecture
  • General effects of benthic organism affects on
    sediment and contaminants
  • Extension of past laboratory work on assessing
    availability of desorption resistant contaminants
    to benthic organism (i.e. effect of contaminants
    on organisms)

6
Bioturbation Particle Diffusion Rates
Freshwater and Estuarine Systems
7
Bioturbation Mixing Depths
Freshwater and Estuarine Systems
8
Effects of BioturbationMicrocosm Experiments
9
Effects of BioturbationContaminant Fate
10
Effects of Contamination on Benthic
OrganismsWhole Sediment Concentration ???
Non- Toxic
Toxic
Adapted from Dave Nakles, ENSR
11
Effects of Contamination on Benthic
OrganismsInterstitial Water Concentration
EPA H. azteca 28-day test
Survival ()
Non- Toxic
Toxic
Sediment Porewater PAH34 Conc. (Toxic Units)
Adapted from Dave Nakles, ENSR
12
Metrics - Correlation (?) of PCB Uptake with
Whole Sediment Concentration
Anacostia River
13
Accumulation Predicted by Porewater?Predicted vs
Measured BSAF - PCBS
Anacostia River
14
Laboratory Correlation of PAH Uptake with
Interstitial Water Concentration
Anacostia River
Assuming KlipidKoc
Porewater
15
But How to Measure Porewater Concentration?
  • Solid Phase MicroExtraction
  • Sorbent Polymer PDMS (poly-dimethylsiloxane)
  • Thickness of glass core 114-108 µm
  • Thickness of PDMS coating 30-31 µm
  • Volume of coating 13.55 (0.02) µL PDMS per
    meter of fibre
  • Easily capable of measuring ng/L concentrations

16
Field Deployment System
17
Field Deployment with Caged Lumbriculus
18
Does it Work in the Field?Field Deployed SPME
with Accumulation in Caged Lumbriculus
Assuming KlipidKoc
19
Anacostia Sediment Porewater Concentration
Contaminants exhibit low availability compared
to the expected whole sediment concentration
20
SPME Measured Porewater Concentrations
21
Summary and Conclusions
  • Bioturbation dominant mechanism for defining
    contaminant fate and transport in non-erosive
    sediments
  • Benthic organisms responsible for bioturbation
    define risk (direct and food chain transport) of
    contaminated sediments
  • Benthic organisms dramatically affect near
    surface redox conditions and contaminant dynamics
  • Interstitial water (porewater) concentrations
    better indicator of exposure and risk than whole
    sediment concentration even for contaminants
    whose uptake is controlled by ingestion
  • Field-deployable SPME simple and useful to define
    exposure and risk
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