This study aimed to introduce non-parametric tests and guard bands to assess the compliance of some river water properties with Brazilian environmental regulations. Due to the heterogeneity of the measurands pH, Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD), manganese molar concentration, and Escherichia coli, which could be wrongly treated as outliers, as well as the non-Gaussian data, robust methods were used to calculate the measurement uncertainty. Next, based on guard bands, the compliance assessment was evaluated using this previous uncertainty information. For these four measurands, partial overlaps between their uncertainties and the specification limit could generate doubts about compliance. The non-parametric approach for calculating the uncertainty connected to the guard bands concept classified pH and BOD as “conform”, with a risk to the consumer of up to 4.0% and 4.9%, respectively; in contrast, manganese molar concentration and Escherichia coli were “not conform”, with a risk to the consumer of up to 25% and 7.4%, respectively. The methodology proposed was satisfactory because it considered the natural heterogeneity of data with non-Gaussian behavior instead of wrongly excluding outliers. In an unprecedented way, two connected statistical approaches shed light on the measurement uncertainty in compliance assessment of water analysis.
Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and other plants bearing an important root system have been shown to be effective in the removal of organic compounds, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Phenanthrene is one of the main contaminants arising from the petrochemical industry and is included in the USEPA's list of priority toxic pollutants. Hydroponic cultures of alfalfa were employed as a model system to evaluate their capability of removing phenanthrene and to study the plantpollutant interaction without the interference of a soil matrix. The removal of phenanthrene was followed over a period of 30 days. The half-life of phenanthrene in hydroponics (initial concentration 50 mg L -1 ) was reduced 2.7 times when plants were present. Growth index, chlorophyll content of leaves, and peroxidase activity of the roots of plants exposed to phenanthrene were lower than the corresponding values of nonexposed plants. Phenanthrene produced an acute negative effect on the total bacterial counts but also caused an increase in degraders/total bacteria ratio. The Ames Salmonella plate incorporation assay was employed to screen for potential genotoxic metabolites, which could be generated by metabolic activation of the parent compound. None of the samples exhibited a positive response. While lack of a positive response to this test is not a definitive evidence of the absence of genotoxic substances, these results suggest that the plant-assisted removal of phenanthrene merits further investigation.
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