History matters: pre-exposure to wastewater enhances pesticide

Jul 6, 2017 - Expanded Target-Chemical Analysis Reveals Extensive Mixed-Organic-Contaminant Exposure in U.S. Streams. Environmental Science & Technolo...
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History matters: pre-exposure to wastewater enhances pesticide toxicity in invertebrates Jochen Peter Zubrod, Dominic Englert, Simon Lüderwald, Sandra Poganiuch, Mirco Bundschuh, and Ralf Schulz Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01303 • Publication Date (Web): 06 Jul 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 10, 2017

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Environmental Science & Technology

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History matters: pre-exposure to wastewater

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enhances pesticide toxicity in invertebrates

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Jochen P. Zubrod†,*, Dominic Englert†, Simon Lüderwald†, Sandra Poganiuch†, Ralf Schulz†,

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Mirco Bundschuh‡

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8

Landau, Germany

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10

Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Koblenz-Landau, Fortstraße 7, D-76829

Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment, Swedish University of Agricultural

Sciences, Lennart Hjelms väg 9, SWE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden

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KEYWORDS: agriculture – multiple stress – shredder – neonicotinoid – wastewater

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WORD COUNT (limit is 7,000):

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Abstract: 194; MS body: 4,123; Acknowledgments: 109; Description of Supporting

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Information: 42; Figures: 3 x 600; Tables: 1 x 300  Total: 6,568

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ABSTRACT (150-200 words)

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Disturbance regimes determine communities’ structure and functioning. Nonetheless, little

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effort has been undertaken to understand interactions of press and pulse disturbances. In this

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context, leaf-shredding macroinvertebrates can be chronically exposed to wastewater

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treatment plant effluents (i.e., press disturbance) before experiencing pesticide exposure

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following agricultural run-off (i.e., pulse disturbance). It is assumed that wastewater pre-

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exposure alters animals’ sensitivity to pesticides. To test this hypothesis, we exposed model-

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populations of the shredder Gammarus fossarum to wastewater at three field-relevant dilution

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levels (i.e., 0%, 50%, and 100%). After 2, 4, and 6 weeks, survival, leaf consumption, dry

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weight, and energy reserves were monitored. Additionally, animals were assessed for their

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sensitivity towards the neonicotinoid insecticide thiacloprid using their feeding rate as

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response variable. Both wastewater treatments reduced gammarids’ survival, leaf

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consumption, dry weight, and energy reserves. Moreover, both wastewater pre-exposure

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scenarios increased animals’ sensitivity towards thiacloprid by up to 2.5 times compared to

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the control. Our results thus demonstrate that press disturbance as posed by wastewater pre-

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exposure can enhance susceptability of key players in ecosystem functioning to further (pulse)

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disturbances. Therefore, applying mitigation measures such as advanced treatment

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technologies seems sensible to support functional integrity in the multiple-stress situation.

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Environmental Science & Technology

INTRODUCTION

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Prevailing disturbance regimes determine community structure and functioning in

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ecosystems. Based on their temporal patterns they may be categorized as press (constant,

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maintained level) or pulse (short-term, sharply delineated) disturbances.1,2 Although the so-

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called multiple-stress situation is generally acknowledged and research on the interaction of a

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diverse range of natural and anthropogenic stressors is available,3,4 little effort has been

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undertaken to understand the interactions of press and pulse disturbances (but see for instance

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Parkyn and Collier5 and Bruder et al.6).

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In this context, the continuous discharge of wastewater from municipal wastewater

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treatment plants represents a press disturbance regime in many low-order streams. This is

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because conventional wastewater treatment (i.e., without use of advanced treatment

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technologies) is not capable of removing all chemicals of anthropogenic origin resulting in a

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continuous exposure of the receiving ecosystems to a wide array of inorganic and organic

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micropollutants and high concentrations of potentially toxic nutrients.7,8 In many of these

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streams the breakdown of leaf litter is a critical ecosystem-level process with leaf-shredding

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macroinvertebrates acting as key players.9,10 However, treated wastewater triggers detrimental

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effects in the physiological fitness and functional performance of shredders such as members

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of the genus Gammarus (Crustacea; Amphipoda)11,12 that frequently inhabit low-order

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streams into which wastewater is discharged.8,13 In consequence, treated wastewater can

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negatively affect in-stream leaf processing rates, while the strength of individual- and

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ecosystem-level effects depends inter alia on the dilution factor of wastewater in the

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receiving stream.8 Low-order streams, however, often also receive pesticides (e.g.,

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insecticides) from adjacent agricultural areas via spray drift and surface runoff.14,15 Since the

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exposure to treated wastewater can reduce the physiological fitness (e.g., energy reserves) of

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aquatic invertebrates (e.g., gammarids12), their sensitivity towards pulse disturbances due to

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pesticide exposure might be modified.16 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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To empirically test this hypothesis, we exposed the amphipod shredder Gammarus

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fossarum KOCH for up to 6 weeks in stream microcosms to wastewater simulating three

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dilution levels (i.e., 0%, 50%, and 100%). After 2, 4, and 6 weeks subsamples of the exposed

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populations were assessed for their sensitivity – employing dose-response experiments –

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towards the model insecticide thiacloprid using the feeding rate of G. fossarum as sublethal

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response variable. During pre-exposure, animals’ survival, energy uptake (i.e., leaf feeding),

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and physiological fitness (judged by animals’ dry weight and energy reserves) were

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monitored to facilitate a mechanistic understanding of a potential wastewater-induced

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modification of their senstivity towards the model insecticide. We hypothesized that

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wastewater exposure would result in a lower energy uptake and physiological fitness of

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Gammarus11 and, at the same time, to trigger a higher senstivity towards the model

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insecticide.16 Moreover, we anticipated these effects to be more pronounced with an

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increasing share of the wastewater during the pre-exposure,17 while genetic erosion due to the

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selective removal of wastewater-sensitive genotypes from the Gammarus populations was

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expected to increase18 or decrease19 insecticide sensitivity over time.

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MATERIAL AND METHODS

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Leaf material

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Leaves of Alnus glutinosa (L.) GAERTN. (black alder) were collected in October 2014 near

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Landau, Germany (49°11’N; 8°05’E) and stored at -20°C until further processing. Leaves

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were deployed for 14 days in fine-mesh bags in the Rodenbach, Germany (49°33’N, 8°02’E),

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upstream of any agricultural activity, settlement, and wastewater inlet, a method known to

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establish a natural microbial community on the leaf material.20 Back in the laboratory,

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unconditioned leaves were added to the retrieved leaf material and the mixed leaves were kept

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in aerated conditioning medium21 at 16±1°C in total darkness for another 14 days before

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being used as microbial inoculum. 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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Leaf strips of 3 to 5 cm × 5 to 9 cm and discs of 2 cm diameter that served as food in the

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stream microcosms and during the dose-response experiments (see below), respectively, were

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cut from unconditioned black alder leaves using scissors and a cork borer, respectively, and

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placed in aerated circular aquaria (150 strips or 660 discs per aquarium). These aquaria were

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filled with 14 L of conditioning medium together with 50 g fresh weight of the microbial

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inoculum. Conditioning took place at 16±1°C in total darkness and lasted 12 days with a

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complete medium exchange after 6 days. Afterwards, leaf strips and discs were sterilized by

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autoclaving to prevent microbial re-colonization of leaf material and thus uncontrollable

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indirect effects during the experiment.22 Subsequently, strips and discs were dried at 60 °C for

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48 and 24 h, respectively, and weighed in portions of 24 (to the nearest 0.1 mg) and two (to

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the nearest 0.01 mg), respectively. Before use in the experiment, leaf material was re-soaked

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in test medium (i.e., SAM-5S23 containing 147 mg CaCl2×2H2O, 85.5 mg NaHCO3, 61.5 mg

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MgSO4×7H2O, 3.8 mg KCl, and 1.03 mg NaBr per liter) for 48 h to reduce buoyancy.

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Test organisms

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Gammarus fossarum were kick-sampled in the near-natural stream Hainbach, Germany

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(49°14’N; 8°03’E; the population inhabiting this sample site is exclusively composed of

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animals belonging to cryptic lineage B24) 7 days prior to the start of the experiment. In the

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laboratory, gammarids were subjected to a passive underwater separation technique as

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described by Franke25: animals were placed on top of a stack of sieves situated in an aerated

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tank filled with SAM-5S with sieves’ mesh sizes progressively becoming smaller towards the

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bottom of the tank. Making use of gammarids’ negative phototaxis, by illuminating the tank

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from above (~400 lx), a downward movement was initiated that divided them into different

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size classes. Only adult males – identified by their position in precopula pairs – of

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approximately 6 to 8 mm body length, which were visually free from acanthocephalan

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parasites, were used in order to reduce variability in inter alia the feeding behavior of 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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Gammarus.26,27 Throughout the acclimation phase in the laboratory (i.e., 7 days), animals

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were kept in aerated stream water from the collection site in a climate-controlled chamber at

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16±1 °C in total darkness, while they were fed ad libitum with pre-conditioned black alder

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leaves. At the start of the experiment 30 animals were shock-frozen in liquid nitrogen and

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stored

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-80 °C for determining gammarids’ dry weights and energy reserves at test initiation (i.e.,

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before exposure to wastewater).

in

glass

tubes

at

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Wastewater exposure

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Time-proportional composite samples (24-hours) of treated wastewater were collected in

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stainless steel containers in biweekly intervals from April to May 2015 at the effluent of the

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wastewater treatment plant Landau-Mörlheim. This plant treats wastewater of a population

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equivalent of approximately 90,000 (~40,000 from industry) using mechanical, biological,

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and

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landau.de/index.phtml?sNavID=1804.65&La=1). Sampling of wastewater was finalized two

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days before the start of the experiment and the medium renewals after 2 and 4 weeks. At the

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same time, stream water from the Hainbach was sampled in stainless steel containers. Both

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types of water were transported to the laboratory, where fine particulate organic matter was

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removed using an external aquarium filtration system (pore density=10 ppi; ecco pro 2034;

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Eheim, Deizisau, Germany). Afterwards, the water was continuously aerated and stored at

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16±1 °C until use (for water quality parameters see Table S1).

chemical

(i.e.,

phosphorus

elimination)

treatment

steps

(http://www.ew-

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Pre-exposure of the Gammarus populations was conducted in the Landau laboratory stream

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microcosm facility (http://uni-ko-ld.de/f7), involving 18 independent stainless steel artificial

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streams (120×30×20 cm3; water volume 40 L) serving as experimental units (for a schematic

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representation see Figure 1A). A pedal wheel in each microcosm facilitated a continuous

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water movement (flow velocity ~0.1 m/s). All experimental units were situated in a water 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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bath set at 16±1 °C, while the day/night rhythm was set at 12/12 h (illuminance=90-130 lx).

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At test initiation, six microcosms were filled with 40 L of stream water from the Hainbach, a

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second set of six microcosms received a 50:50 mixture of stream and wastewater (40 L total),

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and a third set of six microcosms contained 40 L of wastewater (for a schematic

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representation of the timeline of events during the experiment see Figure 1B). Thereby, two

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realistic dilution potentials were realized that roughly mirrored the two extremes determined

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for the receiving stream (i.e., the Queich) of the wastewater treatment plant Landau-Mörlheim

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(i.e., 90% and 35% of wastewater during summer and winter, respectively, over the first ~350

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m after wastewater enters the stream).8 Recently, it was shown that nearly 90% of small

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German streams (mean low flow< 1m3/s) receiving treated wastewater have a low dilution

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potential (