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Article
Fate of Pharmaceuticals and their Transformation Products in four small European Rivers receiving treated Wastewater Zhe Li, Anna Sobek, and Michael Radke Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b06327 • Publication Date (Web): 06 May 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 6, 2016
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Fate of Pharmaceuticals and their Transformation
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Products in four Small European Rivers receiving
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treated Wastewater
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Zhe Li*, Anna Sobek, Michael Radke*,†
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Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES), Stockholm University,
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10691 Stockholm, Sweden
7
ABSTRACT
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Considerable knowledge gaps exist with respect to the fate and environmental relevance of
9
transformation products (TPs) of polar organic micropollutants in surface water. To narrow this
10
gap we investigated the fate of 20 parent compounds (PCs) and 11 characteristic TPs in four
11
wastewater-impacted rivers. Samples were obtained from time-integrated active sampling as well
12
as passive sampling using polar organic chemical integrative samplers (POCIS). Seventeen out
13
of the 20 PCs were detected in at least one of the rivers. All the PCs except acesulfame,
14
carbamazepine and fluconazole were attenuated along the studied river stretches, with the largest
15
decrease found in the smallest river with intense surface water-pore water exchange. Seven TPs
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were detected, all of which were already present directly downstream of the WWTP outfall, thus
17
suggesting that the WWTPs were a major source of TPs to the recipients. For anionic
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compounds, attenuation was the highest in the two rivers with the lowest discharge, while the
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pattern was not as clear for neutral or cationic compounds. For most compounds the results
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obtained from active sampling were not significantly different from those using POCIS,
21
demonstrating that the cost and labor efficient POCIS is suitable to determine the attenuation of
22
organic micropollutants in rivers.
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24
INTRODUCTION
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Recent research has highlighted the importance of investigating biotic and abiotic attenuation
26
processes of pharmaceuticals in rivers.1-5 These processes are substance specific and highly
27
dependent on environmental conditions such as redox status, solar irradiation, microbial
28
communities etc.6-9 To deepen our process-understanding and to identify relevant drivers and
29
constraints of micropollutant transformation in rivers, field studies focusing on a common set of
30
compounds and using comparable sampling strategies are necessary. Moreover, currently there
31
are very few datasets on such a common set of compounds available that cover the range from
32
lab experiments to field studies. This lack of consistent data hampers a straightforward
33
comparison between observations on these various scales and in systems of different complexity.
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A holistic assessment of the environmental fate of organic micropollutants needs
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comprehensive information on the formation of their transformation products (TPs).
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Transformation is frequently associated with detoxification of pollutants, but persistent and/or
37
toxic products may also be formed. For instance, two polar TPs of the antiviral drug acyclovir
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were found to significantly reduce the reproduction level of Daphnia magna and to inhibit the
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growth of green algae.10 Another such example is the increased toxicity to algae reported after
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UV irradiation of surface water containing cephalosporin antibiotics.11 Some TPs may be formed
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at relatively high yields,9,12 as shown in a study on riverbank filtration where atenolol was almost
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quantitatively transformed into atenolol acid.9 Furthermore, some TPs may back-transform into
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the parent compounds (PCs) under certain conditions,13 thereby increasing the exposure to the
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PC downstream of the point of discharge or initial transformation.14 While the knowledge of the
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environmental fate of pharmaceuticals and other polar micropollutants is increasing, the fate of
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their TPs is rarely investigated, despite of a consistently increasing number of studies reporting
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the environmental occurrence of such TPs.
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In studies on the fate of polar organic micropollutants in surface water, samples are typically
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collected using an active method.2,5 It is cost and labor intensive to collect and analyze large
50
numbers of samples. Passive sampling is an alternative approach to determine time-integrated
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concentrations of such micropollutants in the water phase in a more economic manner. Polar
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organic chemical integrative samplers (POCIS), which are designed to sample hydrophilic
53
organic compounds from the aqueous environment, are one type of the most commonly used
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passive samplers. The POCIS sampler has been successfully applied in many environmental
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monitoring studies,15-17 but its potential for determining the attenuation of organic
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micropollutants needs further exploration.
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In the present study, we selected four small- to medium-sized wastewater-receiving rivers in
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Sweden and Germany to simultaneously characterize the fate of both PCs and TPs in situ. The
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rivers cover a wide range of effluent proportion, from as low as 1% of treated wastewater up to
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80% under the conditions studied. We analyzed 20 PCs and 11 TPs. The selection of the PCs
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was based upon their widespread presence in effluent-receiving aquatic systems all over Europe
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and America. We have studied the transformation of these compounds in previous laboratory
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experiments12,18 where we identified and investigated the TPs now monitored in this field study.
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The overarching aim of the study was to improve our understanding of how attenuation of
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organic micropollutants relates to river characteristics by comparing the behavior of the studied
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PCs among the four rivers. We also investigated to what extent the presence of TPs can be
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explained by the attenuation of their PCs. An additional aim was to explore the possibilities of
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using passive sampling to reduce the resources needed for future studies on the fate of organic
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micropollutants in rivers.
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EXPERIMENTAL METHODS
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Chemicals and Reagents
73 74
Details on all chemicals and reagents are provided as Supporting Information. Study Sites
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Sampling was carried out at four wastewater-impacted rivers: Gründlach (GR; Germany),
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Fyris (FY; Sweden), Rönne (RO; Sweden) and Viskan (VI; Sweden), with varying hydraulic
77
boundary conditions (see Table 1 for details and Figure S1 for maps of the study areas). The
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rivers were selected based on three requirements: 1) continuous discharge of WWTP effluent as
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the main source of organic micropollutants; 2) a sufficient proportion of WWTP effluent in the
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river to facilitate detection of the studied compounds; and 3) existence of a stretch downstream
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of the WWTP outfall with no major tributaries or additional sources of organic micropollutants.
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For rivers FY and VI, there is another small WWTP further upstream discharging treated
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wastewater into the rivers. During the sampling period, electrical conductivity, dissolved oxygen,
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pH, and temperature in surface water were measured every two days at all sites using handheld
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probes (Hach, Düsseldorf, Germany). Discharge records during the sampling period were
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obtained from a gauging station operated by the local water board (Wasserwirtschaftsamt
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Nürnberg, Germany) for river GR and from the Swedish Water Archive (SVAR) for the three
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Swedish rivers. Details on the general parameters and discharge data are provided as Supporting
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Information (Figure S2 and Table S2). Total organic carbon (TOC) in river water was measured
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at all sites using a TOC-VCPH analyzer (Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan) following the non-purgeable
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organic carbon (NPOC) protocol. Ultraviolet (UV) absorbance at a wavelength of 254 nm in the
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river water samples was measured on an Evolution 260 Bio UV-Visible spectrophotometer
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(Thermo Fisher Scientific, Stockholm, Sweden).
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Water was sampled over a period of one week at both ends (sites A and B) of a stretch
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downstream of the WWTP outfall. Site A was located after the complete mixing of the WWTP
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effluent with the river water, which was verified using an established USGS guideline.19 The
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distance between the WWTP outlet and site A was about 500 m for all rivers except for RO, for
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which the distance was 3.5 km because it was impossible to access a site closer to the WWTP
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effluent that allowed setting up the sampling equipment. Site B was located 6-12 km further
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downstream of site A yet before the next major source of organic micropollutants into the river
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(e.g., a confluence or effluent from other WWTPs). Sampling at site B started 12 hours later than
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at site A. This time difference was chosen based on pragmatic reasons as the corresponding
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travel times (based on river discharge data) between sites A and B were only available after the
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sampling campaign was terminated.
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Table 1. Characteristics of the Sampling Sites in the Four Studied Rivers Abbreviation River name WWTP (population equivalents) sampling site A coordinates
sampling site B coordinates (distance from site A)
sampling period average discharge (m3 s-1)a temperature (°C)b pHb travel time (d)c
107 108 109 110 111
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GR Gründlach Heroldsberg (12 000) GR_A N 49°31'29.8" E 11°8'4.8" GR_B N 49°31'22.3" E 11°1'27.1" (12 km) 2014/06/14 – 2014/06/22 0.029 ± 0.007 15 ± 0.7 8.0 ± 0.2 2.1
FY Fyris Kungsängsverket (164 200) FY_A N 59°50'32.5" E 17°39'23.8" FY_B N 59°47'14.6" E 17°39'46.4" (7 km) 2014/06/25 – 2014/07/02 2.7 17 ± 1.0 8.1± 0.3 0.6
RO Rönne Klippans (17 000) RO_A N 56°09'47.7" E 13°03'15.4" RO_B N 56°12'26.7" E 12°59'12.1" (6 km) 2014/08/05 – 2014/08/12 5.9 ± 0.6 20 ± 0.6 7.1 ± 0.6 1.0
VI Viskan Gässlösa (80 000) VI_A N 57°42'27.3" E 12°54'55.8" VI_B N 57°39'11.9" E 12°53'27.1" (7 km) 2014/08/23 – 2014/08/30 6.0 ± 0.9 16 ± 1.2 7.0 ± 0.6 1.1
a
For river FY the average discharge data of the month of June from the previous year was used as the gauging station was not operational during the sampling period; bAverage values and standard deviations were calculated from data at sampling sites A and B for the whole sampling period; c Travel time was approximated based on discharge, average stream depth and width, and travel distance.
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Sampling Methods
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Active Sampling
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At each river, time-integrated water samples were collected at the two sampling sites with
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automatic water samplers (model 3700 compact, equipped with a Teflon suction line and a
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stainless steel inlet filter; Teledyne ISCO, Lincoln, NE) for one week during summer 2014
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(Table 1). Water (50 mL) was sampled every hour at a depth of approximately 20 cm below the
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water surface; 24 consecutive samples were combined to one daily composite sample. At the end
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of the sampling period, 150 mL aliquots of these daily samples were combined to give a weekly
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composite sample for each site. As we did not have accurate discharge data at the necessary time
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resolution for the two sampling sites, flow proportional sampling was not possible. However,
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Figure S2 in the Supporting Information shows that the discharge variation was small for all the
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studied rivers during the sampling period, so the difference between the time- and flow-
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proportional strategies are expected to be minor. During the sampling period, all samples were
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kept in darkness and the cavity of the sampler was filled with ice. Samples were subsequently
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stored in 1 L HDPE containers and frozen immediately upon retrieval from the samplers.
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Passive Sampling
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Duplicate POCIS were deployed at each site during the same period as the active samples were
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collected. The passive samplers were obtained from Environmental Sampling Technologies
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(EST) Inc. (St. Joseph, MO, USA) and contained 200 mg of Oasis® HLB solid-phase sorbent
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(Waters Corp., Milford, MA, USA) sandwiched between two sheets of a 0.1 µm pore size
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polyether sulfone membrane. Upon retrieval, all POCIS were gently cleaned according to the
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standard operating procedure (EST Laboratories, 2012) before they were tightly wrapped with
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aluminum foil and stored frozen until analysis.
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Analytical Methods
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Extraction of Water Samples
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River water samples were extracted by solid phase extraction (SPE). An extraction volume of
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500 mL was used for the Swedish rivers FY, RO, and VI, while 250 mL was extracted for river
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GR where higher concentrations of micropollutants were expected based on previous work.2 All
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samples were spiked with an internal standard mixture containing 24 isotope-substituted
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compounds (100 ng of each compound dissolved in methanol). Prior to SPE, the samples were
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vacuum filtered (glass microfiber filter, particle retention 1.2 µm, VWR, Stockholm, Sweden).
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The pH of the filtrate was adjusted to 7.0 using sulfuric acid (0.3 M). Oasis® HLB cartridges
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(500 mg/6 mL) were preconditioned with 5 mL of methanol followed by 5 mL of Milli-Q water
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(pH was adjusted to 7.0 using 1 M sodium hydroxide and 0.3 M sulfuric acid) at a flow rate of 5
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mL min-1 before the samples were loaded onto the cartridges on a vacuum extraction manifold at
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a flow rate of approximately 10 mL min-1. The cartridges were subsequently rinsed with 5 mL of
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Milli-Q water (pH=7.0) and finally dried for 1 h under a nitrogen stream. Afterwards the
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cartridges were eluted with 3 mL of methanol. The extracts were evaporated close to dryness
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under a gentle nitrogen stream at 35 ºC and reconstituted with 2 mL of water/acetonitrile (80:20,
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v/v, 0.1% formic acid). The final extracts were filtered directly into a glass vial using a 0.45 µm
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PTFE syringe filter. Recoveries of the extraction method for the analytes were measured by
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analyzing spiked (with the target substances at a final concentration of 10 µg L-1) river water
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collected from an additional Swedish river (Tidan).
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Processing of Passive Samplers
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The extraction procedure of POCIS was based on the manufacturer’s standard operating
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procedure. Briefly, the POCIS was rinsed with deionized water to remove any material adhering
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to the membrane surfaces. Each sampler was then disassembled and the sorbent material was
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carefully transferred into a 6 mL cartridge with a polyethylene frit, spiked with a solution of
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isotope-substituted internal standards (100 ng each), and covered with another polyethylene frit.
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The cartridge was then rinsed with 5 mL of Milli-Q water to minimize any matrix interference
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(e.g., salts) and dried under vacuum to remove the excess of water. Elution of the analytes was
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performed using 25 mL of methanol. The treatment of the eluate was identical to the treatment of
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the active samples. Two POCIS samplers were analyzed as procedural blanks.
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Analysis
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All sample extracts were stored at -18 ºC until analysis with ultra-high performance liquid
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chromatography (ACQUITY UPLC system, Waters) coupled to a triple quadrupole mass
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spectrometer (Xevo TQ-S; Waters) using electrospray ionization. An ACQUITY HSS T3
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column (100 mm × 2.1 mm, particle diameter 1.8 µm; Waters) was used with a binary mobile
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phase gradient consisting of A) water/acetonitrile (95:5, v/v) and B) water/acetonitrile (5:95,
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v/v), both containing 10 mM acetic acid. The injection volume was 5 µL. The gradient
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separation program is provided as Supporting Information.
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Twenty PCs and 11 TPs were analyzed. The internal standard method with isotope-substituted
175
standards was used for quantification. Calibration curves were based on 10 standards with the
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analytes in a concentration range of 0.01-10 µg L-1 and calculated using a weighted (1/x) linear
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least-squares regression. All extracts were analyzed undiluted and after dilution with
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water/acetonitrile (80:20, v/v, 0.1% formic acid) by a factor of 20 to ensure that the injected
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concentrations of all target compounds were within the linear dynamic range of the instrument.
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A calibration series was measured both before and after every sample sequence. The intra-day
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variability of the instrument was assessed by analyzing a quality control solution (1.0 µg L-1 of
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each analyte) prior to each batch of samples. For quality-control purposes, four of the calibration
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standards and a solvent blank (water/acetonitrile 80:20, v/v, 0.1% formic acid) were measured
184
every eight samples. The method quantification limit (MQL) ranged from 0.04 ng L-1 for most
185
analytes to 4.0 ng L-1 for carboxyibuprofen (details available as Table S3 in the Supporting
186
Information).
187 188
Calculations
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Concentration changes between sites A and B were calculated indirectly by using
190
concentrations normalized to those of a reference compound. This method was previously
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demonstrated valid under conditions of relatively constant discharge,2 which were met in this
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study (Figure S2). The method also relies on rather constant compound ratios in the WWTP
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effluent, which is reasonable to assume for the compounds targeted in this study (only
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micropollutants with regular use pattern, no compounds for which an individual patient could be
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the single source in a small catchment). We used fluconazole, which was shown to be persistent
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in previous lab experiments,12 as reference compound to account for dilution by infiltrating
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groundwater or minor tributaries along the stretch. The relative attenuation (Attx) of a compound
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was calculated using the fluconazole-normalized concentrations. In addition, acesulfame – an
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artificial sweetener previously used as a benchmark chemical to quantify persistence of polar
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chemicals in lakes20 – was used to cross-check the persistence of fluconazole. For each river,
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Attx of a substance along the stretch was calculated by first dividing its concentration at site B by
202
the concentration at site A, then normalizing this ratio by the concentration ratio of fluconazole
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at both sites. A positive value indicates a loss of the compound along the stretch, while a
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negative value indicates a concentration increase. A value of 0 indicates that either the
205
compound is persistent or its attenuation is at a similar rate as its formation. Attx (%) of a
206
compound between site A and B is thus given by:
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Att x = (1 −
𝐶𝐶x,siteB 𝐶𝐶x,siteA
𝐶𝐶REF,siteB
𝐶𝐶REF,siteA
) × 100%
(1)
208
where Cx,siteA and Cx,siteB are the concentrations (ng L-1) of the substance x at site A and B,
209
respectively, CREF,siteA and CREF,siteB are the concentrations (ng L-1) of the reference compound
210
fluconazole at sites A and B. For calculation purposes, when the concentration of an analyte at
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site B as below MQL this concentration was set to the respective MQL. This method was chosen
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as it provides a conservative estimate of the attenuation (i.e., likely underestimates the real
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attenuation).
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To estimate concentrations of pollutants in river water by POCIS, uptake kinetics of the target
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compounds are necessary. Such calibration data is dependent on specific characteristics
216
(temperature, pH, flow velocity, turbulence etc.) of the sampling site and was not available.
217
However, within the scope of this study the concentrations determined from POCIS are not
218
needed. Instead, we calculated Attx of the analytes in samples from POCIS the same way as for
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the analytes in samples collected with active sampling, using eq (1). This procedure does not
220
require any calibration of the POCIS, but relies on the assumption that the uptake kinetics of a
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compound at the two sampling sites are identical, which is reasonable as the river characteristics
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do not change substantially between the two sampling sites in the four rivers.
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For samples from both active and passive sampling, the 95% confidence intervals and p-values
224
for Attx were determined using an ANOVA model with Bonferroni correction after log-
225
transforming the data, meaning that geometric means are used instead of arithmetic means.
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Quality Assurance
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None of the analytes was detected in solvent blank samples (water/acetonitrile 80:20, v/v,
228
0.1% formic acid) or procedural blanks. The intra-day coefficient of variation of the instrument
229
was 0). Attx of acesulfame close
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to 0 was expected due to its known persistence,22 which also confirms that no significant
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attenuation of the reference compound fluconazole occurred along the studied river stretches and
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thus supports the applicability of fluconazole as reference compound in this study. Although
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biodegradation of carbamazepine has previously been observed in lab experiments12,18 and its TP
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carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide has been detected in various aquatic systems9,25,26 as well as in
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this study, neither attenuation of carbamazepine nor a change of fluconazole-normalized
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concentrations of its TP was observed. The persistence of carbamazepine in the current study is
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also supported by a study by Zou et al. (2015) who estimated a transformation half-life of 780-
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5700 d in a Swedish lake.20
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Based on an overall assessment of the Attx values of the 14 PCs that were attenuated in at least
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one river (see Figure S4 for an aggregated view), river GR sticks out as the river with the most
303
efficient micropollutant attenuation. On a per-compound basis, attenuation of each individual
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compound is also the highest in river GR (Figure 3). The Attx values ranged from about 20% for
305
sulfamethoxazole and tramadol to >80% for acetaminophen, bezafibrate and furosemide (Table
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S5). Kunkel and Radke (2012) investigated the environmental fate of 10 pharmaceuticals along
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the same stretch of river GR in the summer of 2010.2 Their dataset and the one generated in this
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study can be considered temporal replicates as both studies were carried out in summer and at
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low river discharge (approximately 0.03-0.04 m3 s-1). For the six compounds attenuated in both
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studies, Attx are in good agreement. For example, Attx of propranolol and sulfamethoxazole was
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70% and 25% in Kunkel and Radke (2012) and 73% and 18% in this study, respectively (see
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Table S6). Kunkel and Radke (2012) already concluded that the boundary conditions in river
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GR, e.g., shallow depth, low turbidity, and sandy sediments, make photolysis in the water
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column and biotransformation in the hyporheic zone relatively efficient. This is also supported
315
by the lowest TOC content and UV absorbance (Table S2) and also the highest global
316
radiation/longest sunshine hours (Figures S3) in GR compared to the other rivers, which further
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demonstrates that GR provided the most favorable conditions for attenuation of compounds
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susceptible to photodegradation. In addition, the large proportion of wastewater in river GR may
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lead to a high abundance of co-emitted wastewater bacteria in the water column or to the
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establishment of a well-adapted biofilm community at the water/sediment interface, both may be
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capable of efficiently transforming organic micropollutants.
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The comparison between the results from the three Swedish rivers is not straightforward
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(Figure 2). All compounds present as anionic species, except sulfamethoxazole, were attenuated
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much more efficiently in river FY than in the other rivers, while two of the neutral compounds
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(acetaminophen, bicalutamide) were not attenuated at all in river FY as compared to Attx of 18-
326
46% in rivers RO and VI. The pattern becomes even more complex when two of the cationic
327
compounds, the beta-blockers metoprolol and propranolol, are taken into account with similar
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Attx values between 16 and 30 % in rivers FY and RO while no attenuation was observed in river
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VI. For the third beta-blocker, sotalol, the opposite pattern was observed with no attenuation in
330
FY and RO and 20% in VI. For sotalol, this is most likely attributed to photodegradation as
331
reported previously.2,27 This interpretation is supported by the characteristics of rivers GR and VI
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as they both have less shading along the studied stretch compared to the other two rivers, and by
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the lowest TOC concentration and UV absorbance (Table S2), thus providing better conditions
334
for light penetration into the water column. However, this interpretation is not in line with the
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Attx pattern of diclofenac, another compound susceptible to photolysis, which had the lowest
336
Attx values in rivers VI and RO. No explanation can be given to resolve this apparent
337
contradiction. The attenuation of hydrochlorothiazide was similar in all the three Swedish rivers
338
but lower than in GR (Attx 36%) by a factor of 1.6-2.0. We conclude that the overall attenuation
339
of hydrochlorothiazide was again favored under the boundary conditions of GR. Previous studies
340
demonstrated that the loss of hydrochlorothiazide in a water-sediment system was attributed to a
341
combination of biotic and abiotic transformation processes such as hydrolysis and
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photodegradation.7,12,28
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There is no obvious explanation for the observed lack of a common attenuation pattern in the
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Swedish rivers. Correlation analysis was performed between the physical-chemical properties of
345
the compounds (pKa and log Dow as shown in Table S1) and the calculated attenuation rates.
346
There is no significant correlation between Attx and any of these properties, meaning that we
347
cannot generalize the attenuation of a compound based on its physical-chemical properties.
348
Based on the anionic compounds, the conclusion would be that biotransformation in river FY is
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most efficient, while based on the neutral compounds the conclusion would be the opposite. For
350
the cationic beta-blockers, sorption to negatively charged sites in solid matter has been shown a
351
relevant loss process in addition to biotransformation.7,12 Sorption to suspended matter and
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subsequent significant sedimentation of suspended matter between sites A and B is however
353
unlikely as a loss process, as the overall particle load was apparently low (no sedimentation in
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sampling bottles observed) and TOC concentrations at sites A and B (Table S2) were
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comparable.
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357 358
Figure 2. Relative attenuation (Attx, %) of parent compounds between site A and B in the four
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rivers as determined by active sampling (ACES: acesulfame, BEZ: bezafibrate, DIC: diclofenac,
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FUR: furosemide, GLI: glimepiride, KET: ketoprofen, SUL: sulfamethoxazole, ACET:
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acetaminophen, BIC: bicalutamide, CAR: carbamazepine, CHL: chlorthalidone, HYD:
362
hydrochlorothiazide, MET: metoprolol, PRO: propranolol, SOT: sotalol, TRA: tramadol). Shown
363
are the 16 out of 19 parent compounds that were detected in at least one river. The compounds
364
are grouped according to their dominant species present at a river water pH of 7.0-8.0. The error
365
bars represent the 95% confidence intervals (relative attenuation is significant if the 95%
366
confidence interval does not include 0). An asterisk indicates that the concentration of a
367
compound was below MQL in the river.
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Transformation Products
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Of the 11 TPs analyzed, seven were detected at both site A and B in the four rivers. Their
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concentrations ranged from 0.29 ng L-1 for α-hydroxymetoprolol in RO to 890 ng L-1 for
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metoprolol acid in GR (Table S4). Figure 3 shows the Attx values calculated for the TPs. We
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expected to observe a formation of TPs (i.e., negative Attx values) along with the attenuation of
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the PCs in a given river system, as was observed in a flume experiment in the laboratory.12
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However, this expectation was only met for two TPs: 4-chlorobenzoic acid (TP of bezafibrate) in
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RO and VI, and metoprolol acid (TP of metoprolol) in FY and RO. For all other instances, Attx
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was ≥0 and the concentrations of all TPs at sampling site A were unexpectedly high.
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The accumulation of 4-chlorobenzoic acid (RO -103%; VI -97%) indicates an ongoing
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biotransformation of bezafibrate, which is supported by the attenuation of the PC (Figure 2).
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However, based on the decrease of bezafibrate concentrations along the stretch (RO: 0.1 ng L-1;
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VI: 0.3 ng L-1) and the increase of TP concentrations (RO: 23 ng L-1; VI: 5.1 ng L-1; see also
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Table S4), there seems to be one or more additional compounds transforming into 4-
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chlorobenzoic acid or there exists another source of this compound between the sampling sites.
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In contrast to RO and VI, 4-chlorobenzoic acid was attenuated in parallel to bezafibrate in the
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other two rivers (GR and FY). Metoprolol acid was attenuated in GR (Attx 39%), while it
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accumulated in FY (Att -8%) and RO (Attx -16%) (Figure 3). Metoprolol acid has an additional
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parent compound (atenolol);29 as this was not analyzed in this study, a more detailed
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interpretation of this TP is not possible. Two TPs of hydrochlorothiazide have previously been
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identified as products formed in a sequence of transformation steps, with chlorothiazide as an
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intermediate detected at lower levels than 4-amino-6-chloro-1,3-benzenedisulfonamide.12,18 The
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results of the current study are qualitatively in line with these findings with respect to the lower
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concentrations of chlorothiazide (Table S4). In addition, in all rivers the TP carbamazepine-
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10,11-epoxide was detected at similar concentrations at both sites A and B. Its PC
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carbamazepine is persistent and therefore no formation of carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide was
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expected along the stretch. The persistence of the TP is also in line with previous degradation
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studies in both water and soil.12,30 In general, the majority of the detected TPs were attenuated in
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river GR, which also is the river where attenuation of the PCs was highest (Figure 2). As argued
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above, this can be attributed to the boundary conditions in GR that provide an environment
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favorable for the attenuation of organic micropollutants.
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While several PCs were substantially attenuated along the distance of 6-12 km between the
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two sampling sites in the rivers, the concentration increase of the corresponding TPs was less
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evident (Figure 3). This might be due to short half-lives of the formed TPs preventing their
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concentrations to build up. Alternatively, the expected increase of TP concentrations might be
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masked by the rather high concentrations of all of the seven detected TPs already at site A. Since
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the travel time for the distance between the WWTP and site A was short (