Refinar búsqueda
Resultados 1-10 de 436
Effect of photooxidation on size distribution, light absorption, and molecular compositions of smoke particles from rice straw combustion Texto completo
2022
Zhao, Ranran | Zhang, Qixing | Xu, Xuezhe | Wang, Wenjia | Zhao, Weixiong | Zhang, Weijun | Zhang, Yongming
Organic aerosol (OA) emitted from biomass burning (BB) impacts air quality and global radiation balance. However, the comprehensive characterization of OA remains poorly understood because of the complex evolutionary behavior of OA in atmospheric processes. In this work, smoke particles were generated from rice straw combustion. The effect of OH radicals photooxidation on size distribution, light absorption, and molecular compositions of smoke particles was systematically investigated. The results showed that the median diameters of smoke particles increased by a factor of approximately 1.2 after photooxidation. In the particle compositions, although both non-polar fractions (n-hexane-soluble organic carbon, HSOC) and polar fractions (water-soluble organic carbon, WSOC) underwent photobleaching after aging, the photobleaching properties of HSOC (1.87–2.19) was always higher than that of WSOC (1.52–1.33). Besides, the light-absorbing properties of HSOC were higher than that of WSOC, showing a factor of approximately 1.75 times for mass absorption efficiency at 365 nm (MAE₃₆₅). Consequently, the simple forcing efficiency (SFE) caused by absorption showed that HSOC has higher radiation effects than WSOC. After photooxidation, the concentration of 16 PAHs in HSOC fractions significantly decreased by 15.3%–72.5%. In WSOC fractions, the content of CHO, CHONS, and CHOS compounds decreased slightly, while the content of CHON compounds increased. Meantime, the variations in molecular properties supported the decrease in light absorption of WSOC fractions. These results reveal the aging behavior of smoke particles, then stress the importance of non-polar organic fractions in particles, providing new insights into understanding the atmospheric pollution caused by BB smoke particles.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Occurrence, spatial distribution, and partitioning behavior of marine lipophilic phycotoxins in the Pearl River Estuary, South China Texto completo
2022
Li, Jing | Ruan, Yuefei | Wu, Rongben | Cui, Yongsheng | Shen, Jincan | Mak, Yim Ling | Wang, Qi | Zhang, Kai | Yan, Meng | Wu, Jiaxue | Lam, Paul K.S.
The occurrence, spatial distribution, and partitioning behavior of 17 marine lipophilic phycotoxins (MLPs) in surface and bottom seawater, particulate organic matter (POM), and surface sediment from the Pearl River Estuary (PRE) were investigated to understand current contamination and the potential risks to marine ecosystems in this region. Nine MLPs were detected, including azaspiracid1−3, gymnodimine, okadaic acid, dinophysistoxin 1−2, pectenotoxin2 (PTX2), and homoyessotoxin, with Σ₁₇MLP concentrations ranging 545–12,600 pg L⁻¹ and 619−8,800 pg L⁻¹ in surface and bottom seawater, respectively; 0–294 ng g⁻¹ and 0.307–300 ng g⁻¹ dry weight (dw) in surface and bottom POM, respectively; and 3.90–982 pg g⁻¹ dw in surface sediment. Lower Σ₁₇MLP levels in the seawater were found at the mouth of the PRE, and gradually increased with increasing distance offshore. According to the calculated partition coefficient, the affinity of MLPs for the aquatic environment components was as follows (from highest to lowest): POM > seawater > sediment. Overall, the distribution and migration of MLPs in the PRE may depend on partition coefficients, the organic carbon fraction, and environmental factors.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Fine particles and pyrogenic carbon fractions regulate PAH partitioning and burial in a eutrophic shallow lake Texto completo
2022
Ya, Miaolei | Wu, Yuling | Wang, Xinhong | Wei, Hengchen
Aquatic particles and organic carbon (OC) regulate the occurrence and transport of hydrophobic organic contaminants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in water-suspended particle-sediment interfaces. Conventional studies on the mechanisms regulating the relationships between PAHs and total particles/OC have ignored micro-scale regulatory factors such as particle size and OC composition. Field research in the eutrophic shallow Lake Taihu, China, revealed that the fine particle fractions 2.7–10 μm in diameter had stronger PAH adsorption capacity and significantly regulated PAH particle size distribution and water-particle partitioning. Selective PAH biodegradation by planktonic microorganisms probably significantly weakened the capacity of the coarse fractions to regulate PAHs. OC fragments at different temperature gradients had markedly different influences on the particle size distribution of PAHs. High-temperature pyrogenic OC fractions (part of black carbon) were the principal OC regulatory factors for medium-to high-molecular-weight PAHs. However, the OC fragments did not directly affect the particle distribution of low-molecular-weight PAHs. During particle deposition and burial, microbial PAH utilization and efficiency probably regulated the burial potential of various hydrophobic PAH species. Biodegradation of relatively less hydrophobic PAHs with octanol-water partition coefficients (log Kₒw) < 5.8 showed an increasing trend with decreasing PAH hydrophobicity. Biological pump action of the relatively higher hydrophobic PAH species (log Kₒw > 5.8) showed a decreasing trend with increasing PAH hydrophobicity. The discoveries of the present work further clarified the mechanisms of PAH partitioning and burial in a eutrophic shallow lake and collectively provides a valuable reference for modeling the transport and dispersal mechanisms of hydrophobic, particle-bound organic contaminants in other aquatic ecosystems.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Microbial processing of autochthonous organic matter controls the biodegradation of 17α-ethinylestradiol in lake sediments under anoxic conditions Texto completo
2022
Bai, Leilei | Liu, Xin | Hua, Ke | Tian, Linqi | Wang, Changhui | Jiang, Helong
The decay of algal biomass and aquatic plants in freshwater lakes leads to the overproduction of autochthonous organic matter (OM) and the exhaustion of dissolved oxygen, impacting the microbial community and subsequent biodegradation of emerging contaminants in sediment. This study explored how the microbial processing of aquatic plant- and algal-derived OM (POM and AOM) mediates 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) biodegradation in the anoxic sediments of Lake Taihu in China. In four months of microcosm incubations, the increased concentrations of protein-like substances in AOM and POM exhibited temporary activation on microbial metabolic enzyme activity (fluorescein diacetate hydrolase and dehydrogenase) and significantly promoted the carbon mineralization with iron reduction (P < 0.001). These in turn increased the EE2 biodegradation efficiency to 77–90 ng g⁻¹ in the anoxic sediment. However, a higher EE2 biodegradation of 109 ng g⁻¹ was achieved with the humic acid augmentation containing more quinone-like compounds, showing a weaker substrate-priming effect but accelerated redox cycling of iron and organic substrates in the later period of incubation. The microbial analysis further revealed that the quinone-like compounds in OM were more closely associated with microbial electron transfer and strengthened their interspecies syntrophic cooperation favorable to contaminant biodegradation, even though the connective members exposed to protein-like components upregulated more functional genes related to organic carbon and xenobiotics metabolism and biodegradation. Our findings will help predict the fate of estrogens in various sedimentary environments under increasing eutrophication and further climate change scenarios.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Fluvial CO2 and CH4 in a lowland agriculturally impacted river network: Importance of local and longitudinal controls Texto completo
2022
Leng, Peifang | Li, Zhao | Zhang, Qiuying | Li, Fadong | Koschorreck, Matthias
Despite streams and rivers play a critical role as conduits of terrestrially produced organic carbon to the atmosphere, fluvial CO₂ and CH₄ are seldom integrated into regional carbon budgets. High spatial variability hinders our ability to understand how local and longitudinal controls affect underlying processes of riverine CO₂ and CH₄ and challenge the prediction and upscaling across large areas. Here, we conducted a survey of fluvial CO₂ and CH₄ concentrations spanning multiple stream orders within an agriculturally impacted region, the North China Plain. We explored the spatial patterns of fluvial CO₂ and CH₄ concentrations, and then examined whether catchment and network properties and water chemical parameters can explain the variations in both carbon gases. Streams and rivers were systematically supersaturated with CO₂ and CH₄ with the mean concentrations being 111 and 0.63 μmol L⁻¹, respectively. Spatial variability of both gases was regulated by network properties and catchment features. Fluvial CO₂ and CH₄ declined longitudinally and could be modeled as functions of stream order, dissolved oxygen, and water temperature. Both models explained about half of the variability and reflected longitudinal and local drivers simultaneously, albeit CO₂ was more local-influenced and CH₄ more longitudinal-influenced. Our empirical models in this work contribute to the upscaling and prediction of CO₂ and CH₄ emissions from streams and rivers and the understanding of proximal and remote controls on spatial patterns of both gases in agriculturally impacted regions.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Investigation of water-soluble organic constituents and their spatio-temporal heterogeneity over the Tibetan Plateau Texto completo
2022
Niu, Hewen | Lu, Xixi | Zhang, Guotao | Sarangi, Chandan
Investigating the migration and transformation of carbonaceous and nitrogenous matter in the cryosphere areas is crucial for understanding global biogeochemical cycle and earth's climate system. However, water-soluble organic constituents and their transformation in multiple water bodies are barely investigated. Water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC) and organic nitrogen (WSON), and particulate black carbon (PBC) in multiple types of water bodies in eastern Tibetan Plateau (TP) cryosphere for the first time have been systematically investigated. Statistical results exhibited that from south to north and from east to west of this region, WSOC concentrations in alpine river runoff were gradually elevated. WSOC and nitrogenous matter in the alpine river runoff and precipitation in the glacier region presented distinct seasonal variations. WSON was the dominant component (63.4%) of water-soluble total nitrogen in precipitation over high-altitude southeastern TP cryosphere. Water-soluble carbonaceous matter dominated the carbon cycle in the TP cryosphere, but particulate carbonaceous matter in the alpine river runoff had a small fraction of the cryospheric carbon cycle. Analysis of optical properties illustrated that PBC had a much stronger light absorption ability (MAC-PBC: 2.28 ± 0.37 m² g⁻¹) than WSOC in the alpine river runoff (0.41 ± 0.26 m² g⁻¹). Ionic composition was dominated by SO₄²⁻, NO₃⁻, and NH₄⁺ (average: 45.13 ± 3.75%) in the snow of glaciers, implying important contribution of (fossil fuel) combustion sources over this region. The results of this study have essential implications for understanding the carbon and nitrogen cycles in high altitude cryosphere regions of the world. Future work should be performed based on more robust in-situ observations and measurements from multiple environmental medium over the cryosphere areas, to ensure ecological protection and high-quality development of the high mountain Asia.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) retention by colloidal activated carbon (CAC) using dynamic column experiments Texto completo
2022
Niarchos, Georgios | Ahrens, Lutz | Kleja, Dan Berggren | Fagerlund, Fritjof
Developing effective remediation methods for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS)-contaminated soils is a substantial step towards counteracting their widespread occurrence and protecting our ecosystems and drinking water sources. Stabilisation of PFAS in the subsurface using colloidal activated carbon (CAC) is an innovative, yet promising technique, requiring better understanding. In this study, dynamic soil column tests were used to assess the retardation of 10 classical perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) (C₅–C₁₁ perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs) and C₄, C₆, C₈ perfluoroalkane sulfonates (PFSAs)) as well as two alternative PFAS (6:2 and 8:2 fluorotelomer sulfonates) using CAC at 0.03% w/w, to investigate the fate and transport of PFAS under CAC treatment applications. Results showed high retardation rates for long-chain PFAS and eight times higher retardation for the CAC-treated soil compared to the non-treated reference soil for the ∑PFAS. Replacement of shorter chain perfluorocarboxylic acids (PFCAs), such as perfluoropentanoic acid (PFPeA), by longer chained PFAS was observed, indicating competition effects. Partitioning coefficients (Kd values) were calculated for the CAC fraction at ∼10³–10⁵ L kg⁻¹ for individual PFAS, while there was a significant positive correlation (p < 0.05) between perfluorocarbon chain length and Kd. Mass balance calculations showed 37% retention of ∑PFAS in treated soil columns after completion of the experiments and 99.7% higher retention rates than the reference soil. Redistribution and elution of CAC were noticed and quantified through organic carbon analysis, which showed a 23% loss of carbon during the experiments. These findings are a step towards better understanding the extent of CAC's potential for remediation of PFAS-contaminated soil and groundwater and the limitations of its applications.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Microplastics in plant-soil ecosystems: A meta-analysis Texto completo
2022
Zhang, Yanyan | Cai, Chen | Gu, Yunfu | Shi, Yuanshuai | Gao, Xuesong
Microplastic pollution is a recognized hazard in aquatic systems, but in the past decade has emerged as a pollutant of interest in terrestrial ecosystems. This paper is the first formal meta-analysis to examine the phytotoxic effects of microplastics and their impact on soil functions in the plant-soil system. Our specific aims were to: 1) determine how the type and size of microplastics affect plant and soil health, 2) identify which agricultural plants are more sensitive to microplastics, and 3) investigate how the frequency and amount of microplastic pollution affect soil functions. Plant morphology, antioxidant production and photosynthesis capacity were impacted by the composition of polymers in microplastics, and the responses could be negative, positive or neutral depending on the polymer type. Phytotoxicity testing revealed that maize (Zea mays) was more sensitive than rice (Oryza sativa) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) within the Poaceae family, while wheat and lettuce (Lactuca sativa) were less sensitive to microplastics exposure. Microplastics-impacted soils tend to be more porous and retain more water, but this did not improve soil stability or increase soil microbial diversity, suggesting that microplastics occupied physical space but were not integrated into the soil biophysical matrix. The meta-data revealed that microplastics enhanced soil evapotranspiration, organic carbon, soil porosity, CO₂ flux, water saturation, nitrogen content and soil microbial biomass, but decreased soil N₂O flux, water stable aggregates, water use efficiency, soil bulk density and soil microbial diversity.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]PM2.5 drives bacterial functions for carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles in the atmosphere Texto completo
2022
Liu, Huan | Hu, Zhichao | Zhou, Meng | Zhang, Hao | Zhang, Xiaole | Yue, Yang | Yao, Xiangwu | Wang, Jing | Xi, Chuanwu | Zheng, Ping | Xu, Xiangyang | Hu, Baolan
Airborne bacteria may absorb the substance from the atmospheric particles and play a role in biogeochemical cycling. However, these studies focused on a few culturable bacteria and the samples were usually collected from one site. The metabolic potential of a majority of airborne bacteria on a regional scale and their driving factors remain unknown. In this study, we collected particulates with aerodynamic diameter ≤2.5 μm (PM₂.₅) from 8 cities that represent different regions across China and analyzed the samples via high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis, and functional database prediction. Based on the FAPROTAX database, 326 (80.69%), 191 (47.28%) and 45 (11.14%) bacterial genera are possible to conduct the pathways of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles, respectively. The pathway analysis indicated that airborne bacteria may lead to the decrease in organic carbon while the increase in ammonium and sulfate in PM₂.₅ samples, all of which are the important components of PM₂.₅. Among the 19 environmental factors studied including air pollutants, meteorological factors, and geographical conditions, PM₂.₅ concentration manifested the strongest correlations with the functional genes for the transformation of ammonium and sulfate. Moreover, the PM₂.₅ concentration rather than the sampling site will drive the distribution of functional genera. Thus, a bi-directional relationship between PM₂.₅ and bacterial metabolism is suggested. Our findings shed light on the potential bacterial pathway for the biogeochemical cycling in the atmosphere and the important role of PM₂.₅, offering a new perspective for atmospheric ecology and pollution control.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Un-biodegradable and biodegradable plastic sheets modify the soil properties after six months since their applications Texto completo
2022
Santini, G. | Acconcia, S. | Napoletano, M. | Memoli, V. | Santorufo, L. | Maisto, G.
Nowadays, microplastics represent emergent pollutants in terrestrial ecosystems that exert impacts on soil properties, affecting key soil ecological functions. In agroecosystems, plastic mulching is one of the main sources of plastic residues in soils. The present research aimed to evaluate the effects of two types of plastic sheets (un-biodegradable and biodegradable) on soil abiotic (pH, water content, concentrations of organic and total carbon, and total nitrogen) and biotic (respiration, and activities of hydrolase, dehydrogenase, β-glucosidase and urease) properties, and on phytotoxicity (germination index of Sorghum saccharatum L. and Lepidium sativum L.). Results revealed that soil properties were mostly affected by exposure time to plastics rather than the kind (un-biodegradable and biodegradable) of plastics. After six months since mesocosm setting up, the presence of un-biodegradable plastic sheets significantly decreased soil pH, respiration and dehydrogenase activity and increased total and organic carbon concentrations, and toxicity highlighted by S. saccharatum L. Instead, the presence of biodegradable plastic sheets significantly decreased dehydrogenase activity and increased organic carbon concentrations. An overall temporal improvement of the investigated properties in soils covered by biodegradable plastic sheets occurred.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]