AI Article Synopsis

  • Bank filtration effectively removes pathogens and pollutants but the behavior of terrestrial particulate organic carbon (tPOC) during this process needs more research.
  • In experiments with different tree leaves, it was found that while microorganisms degrade high molecular weight biopolymers, humic substances resist degradation even after 96 days.
  • Despite some loss during filtration, over 80% of tPOC remained after 54 days, suggesting it serves as a long-term organic reservoir, contributing to elevated dissolved organic carbon (DOC) levels in drinking water from bank filtration sources like lakes in Berlin.

Article Abstract

Bank filtration is a powerful and established barrier for pathogens and organic pollutants. The aerobic degradation of the pollutants competes with the microbial respiration of dissolved and particulate organic matter (DOC and POC). The fate of terrestrial POC (tPOC) in bank filtration is currently not fully understood. In the present study, fallen leaves of different local trees were milled, characterized and investigated as tPOC in both batch and column experiments. The respective contents of carbon and nitrogen differed slightly, but the different leaves released significantly different DOC fractions as determined by size-exclusion chromatography. While high molecular weight biopolymers were degraded by indigenous microorganisms, humic substances were not degraded within 96days in batch experiments. DOC release and POC wash-out in column experiments led to a slight decrease of tPOC depositions, but more than 80% of the initial tPOC remained after 54days thus representing a long-term organics reservoir for microbial respiration. The release of humic substances from autumnal leaf litter inputs is a plausible explanation for comparably high DOC concentrations (approximately 4.5mg/L) in Berlin drinking water that mainly originates from lake bank filtration.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.07.148DOI Listing

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