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Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Expanded Target-Chemical Analysis Reveals Extensive Mixed-Organic-Contaminant Exposure in U.S. Streams

Paul M. Bradley; Celeste A. Journey; Kristin M. Romanok; Larry B. Barber; Herbert T. Buxton; William T. Foreman; Edward T. Furlong; Susan T. Glassmeyer; Michelle L. Hladik; Luke R. Iwanowicz; Daniel K. Jones; Dana W. Kolpin; Kathryn M. Kuivila; Keith A. Loftin; Marc A. Mills; Michael T. Meyer; James L. Orlando; Timothy J. Reilly; Kelly L. Smalling; Daniel L. Villeneuve

Surface water from 38 streams nationwide was assessed using 14 target-organic methods (719 compounds). Designed-bioactive anthropogenic contaminants (biocides, pharmaceuticals) comprised 57% of 406 organics detected at least once. The 10 most-frequently detected anthropogenic-organics included eight pesticides (desulfinylfipronil, AMPA, chlorpyrifos, dieldrin, metolachlor, atrazine, CIAT, glyphosate) and two pharmaceuticals (caffeine, metformin) with detection frequencies ranging 66-84% of all sites. Detected contaminant concentrations varied from less than 1 ng L-1 to greater than 10 μg L-1, with 77 and 278 having median detected concentrations greater than 100 ng L-1 and 10 ng L-1, respectively. Cumulative detections and concentrations ranged 4-161 compounds (median 70) and 8.5-102 847 ng L-1, respectively, and correlated significantly with wastewater discharge, watershed development, and toxic release inventory metrics. Log10 concentrations of widely monitored HHCB, triclosan, and carbamazepine explained 71-82% of the variability in the total number of compounds detected (linear regression; p-values: < 0.001-0.012), providing a statistical inference tool for unmonitored contaminants. Due to multiple modes of action, high bioactivity, biorecalcitrance, and direct environment application (pesticides), designed-bioactive organics (median 41 per site at μg L-1 cumulative concentrations) in developed watersheds present aquatic health concerns, given their acknowledged potential for sublethal effects to sensitive species and lifecycle stages at low ng L-1.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

Sediment chemistry and toxicity in Barnegat Bay, New Jersey: Pre- and post-Hurricane Sandy, 2012–13

Kristin M. Romanok; Zoltan Szabo; Timothy J. Reilly; Zafer Defne; Neil K. Ganju

Hurricane Sandy made landfall in Barnegat Bay, October, 29, 2012, damaging shorelines and infrastructure. Estuarine sediment chemistry and toxicity were investigated before and after to evaluate potential environmental health impacts and to establish post-event baseline sediment-quality conditions. Trace element concentrations increased throughout Barnegat Bay up to two orders of magnitude, especially north of Barnegat Inlet, consistent with northward redistribution of silt. Loss of organic compounds, clay, and organic carbon is consistent with sediment winnowing and transport through the inlets and sediment transport modeling results. The number of sites exceeding sediment quality guidance levels for trace elements tripled post-Sandy. Sediment toxicity post-Sandy was mostly unaffected relative to pre-Sandy conditions, but at the site with the greatest relative increase for trace elements, survival rate of the test amphipod decreased (indicating degradation). This study would not have been possible without comprehensive baseline data enabling the evaluation of storm-derived changes in sediment quality.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

Regional variability in bed-sediment concentrations of wastewater compounds, hormones and PAHs for portions of coastal New York and New Jersey impacted by hurricane Sandy

Patrick J. Phillips; Catherine A. Gibson; Shawn C. Fisher; Irene J. Fisher; Timothy J. Reilly; Kelly L. Smalling; Kristin M. Romanok; William T. Foreman; Rhiannon C. ReVello; Michael J. Focazio; Daniel K. Jones

Bed sediment samples from 79 coastal New York and New Jersey, USA sites were analyzed for 75 compounds including wastewater associated contaminants, PAHs, and other organic compounds to assess the post-Hurricane Sandy distribution of organic contaminants among six regions. These results provide the first assessment of wastewater compounds, hormones, and PAHs in bed sediment for this region. Concentrations of most wastewater contaminants and PAHs were highest in the most developed region (Upper Harbor/Newark Bay, UHNB) and reflected the wastewater inputs to this area. Although the lack of pre-Hurricane Sandy data for most of these compounds make it impossible to assess the effect of the storm on wastewater contaminant concentrations, PAH concentrations in the UHNB region reflect pre-Hurricane Sandy conditions in this region. Lower hormone concentrations than predicted by the total organic carbon relation occurred in UHNB samples, suggesting that hormones are being degraded in the UHNB region.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017

Widespread occurrence and potential for biodegradation of bioactive contaminants in Congaree National Park, USA

Paul M. Bradley; William A. Battaglin; Jimmy M. Clark; Frank P. Henning; Michelle L. Hladik; Luke R. Iwanowicz; Celeste A. Journey; Jeffrey W. Riley; Kristin M. Romanok

Organic contaminants with designed molecular bioactivity, such as pesticides and pharmaceuticals, originate from human and agricultural sources, occur frequently in surface waters, and threaten the structure and function of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Congaree National Park in South Carolina (USA) is a vulnerable park unit due to its location downstream of multiple urban and agricultural contaminant sources and its hydrologic setting, being composed almost entirely of floodplain and aquatic environments. Seventy-two water and sediment samples were collected from 16 sites in Congaree National Park during 2013 to 2015, and analyzed for 199 and 81 targeted organic contaminants, respectively. More than half of these water and sediment analytes were not detected or potentially had natural sources. Pharmaceutical contaminants were detected (49 total) frequently in water throughout Congaree National Park, with higher detection frequencies and concentrations at Congaree and Wateree River sites, downstream from major urban areas. Forty-seven organic wastewater indicator chemicals were detected in water, and 36 were detected in sediment, of which approximately half are distinctly anthropogenic. Endogenous sterols and hormones, which may originate from humans or wildlife, were detected in water and sediment samples throughout Congaree National Park, but synthetic hormones were detected only once, suggesting a comparatively low risk of adverse impacts. Assessment of the biodegradation potentials of 8 14 C-radiolabeled model contaminants indicated poor potentials for some contaminants, particularly under anaerobic sediments conditions. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:3045-3056. Published 2017 Wiley Periodicals Inc. on behalf of SETAC. This article is a US government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.


Waste Management | 2015

Screening tool to evaluate the vulnerability of down-gradient receptors to groundwater contaminants from uncapped landfills

Ronald J. Baker; Timothy J. Reilly; Anthony R. Lopez; Kristin M. Romanok; Edward W Wengrowski

A screening tool for quantifying levels of concern for contaminants detected in monitoring wells on or near landfills to down-gradient receptors (streams, wetlands and residential lots) was developed and evaluated. The tool uses Quick Domenico Multi-scenario (QDM), a spreadsheet implementation of Domenico-based solute transport, to estimate concentrations of contaminants reaching receptors under steady-state conditions from a constant-strength source. Unlike most other available Domenico-based model applications, QDM calculates the time for down-gradient contaminant concentrations to approach steady state and appropriate dispersivity values, and allows for up to fifty simulations on a single spreadsheet. Sensitivity of QDM solutions to critical model parameters was quantified. The screening tool uses QDM results to categorize landfills as having high, moderate and low levels of concern, based on contaminant concentrations reaching receptors relative to regulatory concentrations. The application of this tool was demonstrated by assessing levels of concern (as defined by the New Jersey Pinelands Commission) for thirty closed, uncapped landfills in the New Jersey Pinelands National Reserve, using historic water-quality data from monitoring wells on and near landfills and hydraulic parameters from regional flow models. Twelve of these landfills are categorized as having high levels of concern, indicating a need for further assessment. This tool is not a replacement for conventional numerically-based transport model or other available Domenico-based applications, but is suitable for quickly assessing the level of concern posed by a landfill or other contaminant point source before expensive and lengthy monitoring or remediation measures are taken. In addition to quantifying the level of concern using historic groundwater-monitoring data, the tool allows for archiving model scenarios and adding refinements as new data become available.


Archive | 2017

Concentrations of Bioactive Organic Contaminants in Water and Sediment and Rates of Contaminant Biodegradation in Sediment at Congaree National Park, USA 2013-15

Paul M. Bradley; Kristin M. Romanok; Celeste A. Journey

Data release including concentrations of bioactive organic contaminants in water and sediment and biodegradation rates of select model contaminants in sediment from Congaree National Park during 2013-15. Chemical analyses for targeted organic analytes include, human-use pharmaceuticals, degradates and metabolites and hormones and organic wastewater indicator compounds. Samples were collected between May 2013 and May 2015. Data release is associated with journal article: Bradley, P.M., W.A. Battaglin, J.M. Clark, F.P. Henning, M.L. Hladik, L.R. Iwanowicz, C.A. Journey, J. Riley, and K.M. Romanok, in press, Widespread Occurrence and the Potential for Biodegradation of Bioactive Contaminants in Protected Wilderness at Congaree National Park, USA: Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry, https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.3873.


Data Series | 2015

Estuarine bed-sediment-quality data collected in New Jersey and New York after Hurricane Sandy, 2013

Jeffrey M. Fischer; Patrick J. Phillips; Timothy J. Reilly; Michael J. Focazio; Keith A. Loftin; William M. Benzel; Daniel K. Jones; Kelly L. Smalling; Shawn C. Fisher; Irene J. Fisher; Luke R. Iwanowicz; Kristin M. Romanok; Darkus E. Jenkins; Luke Bowers; Adam Boehlke; William T. Foreman; Anna C. Deetz; Lisa G. Carper; Thomas E. Imbrigiotta; Justin E. Birdwell


Circular | 2004

Water Quality in the Delaware River Basin, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and Delaware, 1998-2001

Jeffrey M. Fischer; Karen Riva-Murray; R. Edward Hickman; Douglas C. Chichester; Robin A. Brightbill; Kristin M. Romanok; Michael D. Bilger


Data Series | 2015

Chemical and ancillary data associated with bed sediment, young of year Bluefish ( Pomatomus saltatrix ) tissue, and mussel ( Mytilus edulis and Geukensia demissa ) tissue collected after Hurricane Sandy in bays and estuaries of New Jersey and New York, 2013–14

Kelly L. Smalling; Ashok D. Deshpande; Vicki S. Blazer; Heather S. Galbraith; Bruce W. Dockum; Kristin M. Romanok; Kaitlyn M. Colella; Anna C. Deetz; Irene J. Fisher; Thomas E. Imbrigiotta; Beth Sharack; Lisa Summer; DeMond Timmons; John J. Trainor; Daniel Wieczorek; Jennifer Samson; Timothy J. Reilly; Michael J. Focazio


Archive | 2017

Inorganic and organic concentration data collected from 38 streams in the United States, 2012-2014, with supporting data, as part of the Chemical Mixtures and Environmental Effects Pilot Study.

Kristin M. Romanok; Paul M. Bradley; Celeste A. Journey

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Timothy J. Reilly

United States Geological Survey

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Celeste A. Journey

United States Geological Survey

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Kelly L. Smalling

United States Geological Survey

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Paul M. Bradley

United States Geological Survey

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Luke R. Iwanowicz

United States Geological Survey

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Michelle L. Hladik

United States Geological Survey

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William T. Foreman

United States Geological Survey

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Daniel K. Jones

United States Geological Survey

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Irene J. Fisher

United States Geological Survey

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Jeffrey M. Fischer

United States Geological Survey

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