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Featured researches published by Y. Levi.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

Application of a multidisciplinary and integrative weight-of-evidence approach to a 1-year monitoring survey of the Seine River

Iris Barjhoux; Lise C. Fechner; Jérémie D. Lebrun; Adriana Anzil; Sophie Ayrault; Hélène Budzinski; Jérôme Cachot; Laetitia Charron; Arnaud Chaumot; Christelle Clérandeau; Odile Dedourge-Geffard; Juliette Faburé; Adeline François; Olivier Geffard; Isabelle George; Pierre Labadie; Y. Levi; Gabriel Munoz; Patrice Noury; Lucie Oziol; Hervé Quéau; Pierre Servais; Emmanuelle Uher; Nastassia Urien; Alain Geffard

Quality assessment of environments under high anthropogenic pressures such as the Seine Basin, subjected to complex and chronic inputs, can only be based on combined chemical and biological analyses. The present study integrates and summarizes a multidisciplinary dataset acquired throughout a 1-year monitoring survey conducted at three workshop sites along the Seine River (PIREN-Seine program), upstream and downstream of the Paris conurbation, during four seasonal campaigns using a weight-of-evidence approach. Sediment and water column chemical analyses, bioaccumulation levels and biomarker responses in caged gammarids, and laboratory (eco)toxicity bioassays were integrated into four lines of evidence (LOEs). Results from each LOE clearly reflected an anthropogenic gradient, with contamination levels and biological effects increasing from upstream to downstream of Paris, in good agreement with the variations in the structure and composition of bacterial communities from the water column. Based on annual average data, the global hazard was summarized as “moderate” at the upstream station and as “major” at the two downstream ones. Seasonal variability was also highlighted; the winter campaign was least impacted. The model was notably improved using previously established reference and threshold values from national-scale studies. It undoubtedly represents a powerful practical tool to facilitate the decision-making processes of environment managers within the framework of an environmental risk assessment strategy.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Applying sewage epidemiology approach to estimate illicit drug consumption in a tropical context: Bias related to sewage temperature and pH

Damien A. Devault; Y. Levi; Sara Karolak

Illicit drug consumption can be estimated from drug target residue (DTR) in wastewater, with the reliability of results being partly linked to DTR stability in the sewage network. However, wastewater temperature and pH drive the stability of molecules and, in this context, tropical conditions must be studied to specify the impact of residence time in the sewage network on DTR degradation. Warmth enhances biotic and abiotic processes such as degradation, leading to a decrease in oxygen content, and consequently, early diagenesis conditions in wastewater. In this study, we conduct laboratory studies under acidic pH and high temperature (30°C) conditions to determine the degradation half-lives of cocaine (COC), tetrahydrocannabinol, and heroine targets, allowing COC/benzoylecgonine (BZE) ratio variations to be predicted in sewage networks. A rapid COC degradation is observed, as already reported in the literature but without a short-term significant difference between 20°C and 30°C. Acidic pH seems to prevent degradation. Thus, theoretically, the use of COC as DTR is only reliable in acidic conditions, with the decrease in COC concentration being 6% at 8h, but over 40% in other conditions. By contrast, the use of BZE as DTR to estimate COC consumption, which is performed in practice, can be undertaken with the same back-calculation equation as used in temperate countries. However, 11-nor-delta-9-carboxytetrahydrocannabinol stability is more influenced by high temperature: concentration levels after 24h are 20% lower at 30°C than at 20°C, corresponding to a 20% and 40% decrease, respectively. Based on a mean residence time of 8h, underestimated cannabis consumption is close to 15% in tropical contexts, which is double that of temperate areas.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Exposure of an urban population to pesticides assessed by wastewater-based epidemiology in a Caribbean island

Damien A. Devault; Sara Karolak; Y. Levi; Nikolaos I. Rousis; Ettore Zuccato; Sara Castiglioni

Wastewater-based epidemiology is an innovative approach to estimate the consumption of chemicals and their exposure patterns in a population, on the basis of measurements of biomarkers in wastewater. This method can provide objective real-time information on xenobiotics directly or indirectly ingested by a population. This approach was used to examine the exposure of the Martinique population to the three classes of pesticides: triazines, organophosphates and pyrethroids. Martinique island (French West Indies) is a closed market and has been closely monitored since the early 2000s when contamination with chlordecone, an organochlorine insecticide widely applied between 1972 and 1993 in banana plantations, became a critical political issue. The aim of this study was to identify and quantify the patterns of human exposure and compare the results to those from other countries. Wastewater was collected as 24-h composite samples and analysed for selected urinary pesticide metabolites by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Organophosphate and pyrethroid metabolites were found in all the samples up to 330 ng/L, while triazines were found only at trace levels. Mass loads indicated higher exposure to pyrethroids than in some cities in Europe, but lower exposure to triazines and organophosphates. The estimated human intake for pyrethroids was close to the Acceptable Daily Intake, but importation of these pesticides to Martinique was low. This study illustrates the high human exposure with indoor pesticide use in comparison to its use in agriculture.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Enrichment of free-living amoebae in biofilms developed at upper water levels in drinking water storage towers: An inter- and intra-seasonal study

Alexandre Taravaud; Myriam Ali; Bernard Lafosse; Valérie Nicolas; Cédric Féliers; Sylvie Thibert; Y. Levi; Philippe M. Loiseau; Sébastien Pomel

Free-living amoebae (FLA) are ubiquitous organisms present in various natural and artificial environments, such as drinking water storage towers (DWST). Some FLA, such as Acanthamoeba sp., Naegleria fowleri, and Balamuthia mandrillaris, can cause severe infections at ocular or cerebral level in addition to being potential reservoirs of other pathogens. In this work, the abundance and diversity of FLA was evaluated in two sampling campaigns: one performed over five seasons in three DWST at three different levels (surface, middle and bottom) in water and biofilm using microscopy and PCR, and one based on the kinetics analysis in phase contrast and confocal microscopy of biofilm samples collected every two weeks during a 3-month period at the surface and at the bottom of a DWST. In the seasonal study, the FLA were detected in each DWST water in densities of ~20 to 25amoebaeL-1. A seasonal variation of amoeba distribution was observed in water samples, with maximal densities in summer at ~30amoebaeL-1 and minimal densities in winter at ~16amoebaeL-1. The FLA belonging to the genus Acanthamoeba were detected in two spring sampling campaigns, suggesting a possible seasonal appearance of this potentially pathogenic amoeba. Interestingly, a 1 log increase of amoebae density was observed in biofilm samples collected at the surface of all DWST compared to the middle and the bottom where FLA were at 0.1-0.2amoebae/cm2. In the kinetics study, an increase of amoebae density, total cell density, and biofilm thickness was observed as a function of time at the surface of the DWST, but not at the bottom. To our knowledge, this study describes for the first time a marked higher FLA density in biofilms collected at upper water levels in DWST, constituting a potential source of pathogenic micro-organisms.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2017

Validation of an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method to quantify illicit drug and pharmaceutical residues in wastewater using accuracy profile approach

Cécile Hubert; Martin Roosen; Y. Levi; Sara Karolak

The analysis of biomarkers in wastewater has become a common approach to assess community behavior. This method is an interesting way to estimate illicit drug consumption in a given population: by using a back calculation method, it is therefore possible to quantify the amount of a specific drug used in a community and to assess the consumption variation at different times and locations. Such a method needs reliable analytical data since the determination of a concentration in the ngL-1 range in a complex matrix is difficult and not easily reproducible. The best analytical method is liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry coupling after solid-phase extraction or on-line pre-concentration. Quality criteria are not specially defined for this kind of determination. In this context, it was decided to develop an UHPLC-MS/MS method to analyze 10 illicit drugs and pharmaceuticals in wastewater treatment plant influent or effluent using a pre-concentration on-line system. A validation process was then carried out using the accuracy profile concept as an innovative tool to estimate the probability of getting prospective results within specified acceptance limits. Influent and effluent samples were spiked with known amounts of the 10 compounds and analyzed three times a day for three days in order to estimate intra-day and inter-day variations. The matrix effect was estimated for each compound. The developed method can provide at least 80% of results within ±25% limits except for compounds that are degraded in influent.


Revue des sciences de l'eau / Journal of Water Science | 1992

Studies of BDOC and bacterial dynamics in the drinking water distribution system of the Northern Parisian suburbs

Pierre Servais; Gilles Billen; Pascal Laurent; Y. Levi; Guy Randon


TSM. Techniques sciences méthodes , génie urbain génie rural | 1992

Etude de la colonisation bactérienne des réseaux de distribution

Pierre Servais; Patrick Laurent; Gilles Billen; Y. Levi


Revue des sciences de l'eau | 1992

Elimination du carbone organique dissous biodégradable durant la filtration biologique sur charbon actif en grains = Biodegradable dissolved organic carbon removal during biological filtration on granular activated carbon

P. Bouillot; Pierre Servais; Gilles Billen; Y. Levi


Revue des sciences de l'eau | 1992

Elimination du carbone organique dissous biodégradable durant la filtration biologique sur charbon actif en grains

P. Bouillot; Pierre Servais; Gilles Billen; Y. Levi


Archive | 1991

Study of bacterial regrowth in the distribution system of the Northern Parisian suburbs

Pierre Servais; Gilles Billen; Pascal Laurent; Y. Levi; Guy Randon

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Pierre Servais

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Gilles Billen

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sara Karolak

Université Paris-Saclay

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Adriana Anzil

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Isabelle George

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Patrick Laurent

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Arnaud Chaumot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sophie Ayrault

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Geffard

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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