AI Article Synopsis

  • The Ibirité reservoir has faced ecological degradation largely due to raw urban sewage discharge, despite prior beliefs that oil refinery effluents were the main cause.
  • Sediment analysis revealed lower concentrations of hydrocarbons and metals compared to other polluted sites, with most pollution sources being petrogenic, pyrogenic, or from industrial activities.
  • Certain toxic metals in the sediment pose risks to aquatic life, indicating that the reservoir's degradation results from various pollution sources, particularly urban sewage, rather than hydrocarbons alone.

Article Abstract

Although the Ibirité reservoir (an urban tropical eutrophic reservoir) has been the recipient of the discharge of a large volume of raw urban sewage, the key cause of ecosystem degradation has been historically solely attributed to the discharge of effluents from an oil refinery. This fact motivated an investigation to unravel the compositions of contaminants in the sediments to evaluate their distributions, possible sources, and potential impacts on sediment–water quality. The concentrations of polycyclic aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons and of metals and metalloids were, in general, significantly lower than some selected polluted sites used for comparison. Calculated distribution indexes showed that the hydrocarbon sources were petrogenic, pyrogenic, and biogenic. Only a few PAHs exceeded the threshold effects level (TEL) guideline. Industrial activities are the presumed sources of metals and metalloids except for copper, which is from copper sulfate used as algaecide in the reservoir. The bioavailable concentrations of some metal and metalloid exceeded the TEL–PEL guidelines. The acid volatile sulfide concentration was greater than that of the simultaneously extracted metals in the clayey–silty reservoir sediments, whereas the opposite result was observed for the sandy sediments of the tributaries. The sediment interstitial water toxic units were >1 for metals, thus indicating that metals are potentially toxic to the benthos. Considering the data set generated in this study, it can be concluded that the degradation of Ibirité reservoir and its tributaries cannot be solely attributed to the input of hydrocarbons, but predominantly to the discharge of raw urban sewage and effluents from other industrial sources.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-013-3419-5DOI Listing

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