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Persistence of Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers in Agricultural Soils after Biosolids Applications
77
Citations
24
References
2010
Year
EngineeringSoil Organic MatterAgricultural SoilsOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistrySoil PollutionBioremediationAbundant Pbde CongenersPersistent Organic PollutantSoil ContaminationAverage Pbde ConcentrationsEcotoxicologyEnvironmental FateChemical PollutionWaste ManagementPolybrominated Diphenyl EthersEnvironmental EngineeringSoil ChemistryEnvironmental RemediationBiosolids ApplicationsEnvironmental ToxicologyPbde Concentrations
This study examines polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) levels, trends in biosolids from a wastewater treatment plant, and evaluates potential factors governing PBDE concentrations and the fate in agricultural soils fertilized by biosolids. The mean concentration of the most abundant PBDE congeners in biosolids ( summation operatorBDE-47, BDE-99, and BDE-209) generated by one wastewater treatment plant was 1250 +/- 134 microg/kg d.w. with no significant change in concentration over 32 months (n = 15). In surface soil samples from the Mid-Atlantic region, average PBDE concentrations in soil from fields receiving no biosolids (5.01 +/- 3.01 microg/kg d.w.) were 3 times lower than fields receiving one application (15.2 +/- 10.2 microg/kg d.w.) and 10 times lower than fields that had received multiple applications (53.0 +/- 41.7 microg/kg d.w.). The cumulative biosolids application rate and soil organic carbon were correlated with concentrations and persistence of PBDEs in soil. A model to predict PBDE concentrations in soil after single or multiple biosolids applications provides estimates which fall within a factor of 2 of observed values.
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