Worsening freshwater scarcity has
heightened the need for treatment
technologies capable of eliminating chemical and biological contaminants
to allow for the beneficial use of traditionally underutilized water
resources. In urbanized arid and semiarid regions such as California,
urban drainage represents an increasingly important water source for
augmenting water supply. However, monitoring shows that urban streams
are contaminated ubiquitously with urban-use insecticides (e.g., pyrethroids
and fipronil) that have broad-spectrum toxicity. In this study, a
large open-water wetland pond (OWWP), characterized by shallow water
depth and the absence of permanent vegetation, was evaluated for the
removal of pyrethroids and fipronil (and its biologically active degradates).
Concentration-based removal and changes in the pesticide mass
flux were calculated to determine the efficacy of the OWWP. Toxic
units for indicator aquatic invertebrates were estimated before and
after the OWWP treatment to determine reductions in potential aquatic
toxicity. Contaminant concentrations in water and sediment consistently
decreased as the water was moving through the OWWP. Concentration-based
removals were 44.2–100% for fipronil compounds, 61.8–100%
for bifenthrin, and 47.3–92.7% for cyfluthrin, and the removal
was attributed to sedimentation, in situ microbial degradation, and
photolysis. The mitigation of these urban-use insecticides by the
OWWP was similar to that of a densely vegetated constructed wetland
at the same site. Therefore, OWWPs represent a low-maintenance and
effective wetland configuration for large-scale water reclamation
and may be particularly useful for arid and semiarid regions with
favorable meteorological conditions (e.g., intense sunshine and high
temperature).
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