press release, 07. March 2024

Mapping chemical footprints in European streams

UFZ analysis shows a mix of chemicals that endanger invertebrate organisms in particular

It is well known that if chemicals from domestic sources enter water bodies via sewage treatment plants, agriculture, and industry, this can endanger freshwater ecosystems. In order to find out more about the pollution of European rivers, a research team from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) analysed around 450 samples from 22 European watercourses and found more than 500 harmful chemicals, some of them in high concentrations. According to an article recently published in Environment International, these pose a high risk for invertebrates in particular.  

The map shows the chemical pollution of European watercourses. The size of the circles corresponds to the number of substances detected per sampling point. The colours quantify the number of chemicals detected simultaneously at a sampling site (e.g. 51 to 100 substances were detected in 41% of the sites). Photo: UFZ
The map shows the chemical pollution of European watercourses. The size of the circles corresponds to the number of substances detected per sampling point. The colours quantify the number of chemicals detected simultaneously at a sampling site (e.g. 51 to 100 substances were detected in 41% of the sites).
Photo: UFZ

Many pesticides, industrial chemicals, and pharmaceuticals as well as their degradation products end up in streams and rivers after use. A team of environmental chemists at the UFZ has therefore taken a closer look at 610 chemicals with known occurrence patterns or problematic effects and analysed whether and in what concentrations they occur in European watercourses - from large rivers such as the Elbe, Danube, and Rhine to the Ebro and Tagus on the Iberian Peninsula to smaller streams in agricultural regions of Germany. After analysing 445 samples from 22 rivers, the researchers detected 504 of the 610 chemicals. They found 229 pesticides and biocides and 175 pharmaceutical chemicals as well as surfactants, plastic and rubber additives, per- and polyfuoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and corrosion inhibitors. They detected up to 50 chemical substances in 40% of the samples and 51-100 chemicals in a further 41%. In four samples, they were even able to detect more than 200 organic micropollutants. They detected the most substances - 241 chemicals - in a water sample taken from the Danube. 

In the samples, the environmental chemists most frequently found N-acetyl-4-aminoantpyrine, which is a degradation product of the analgesic metamizole. Little is known about the effects of this substance on freshwater ecosystems. "For many of these metabolites, it is unclear how harmful they are to the environment. We still lack the necessary knowledge", says UFZ environmental chemist Saskia Finckh, co-lead author of the study. However, the negative effects of other substances detected in the waters have already been researched. One of the most common of these substances is the anticonvulsant carbamazepine, which is not readily biodegradable in bodies of water. It also impairs the reproductive capacity of invertebrates and delays the development of fish. Carbamazepine is therefore already on the watch list of the Federal Environment Agency (UBA) and is one of 23 other proposed priority substances to be added to the EU Water Framework Directive. The effect of some other substances also frequently detected in the samples is also known. For example, the UFZ researchers frequently found the insecticides diazinon and fipronil, both of which are extremely harmful to aquatic invertebrates. In total, the chronic risk thresholds for invertebrates were exceeded for more than 70 chemicals detected in the waters. This means that prolonged or repeated exposure can lead to developmental disorders, among other things.

Many of the individual organic micropollutants are a problem for water bodies in their own right. However, there is an additional one to worry about. "The range of chemicals that are discharged into water bodies is a big problem. We still know far too little about the additive effects of these substances when they mix with each other", explains Dr Eric Carmona, UFZ environmental chemist and co-lead author. In order to be able to assess the impact of these mixing effects on the organisms living in the watercourses, the researchers applied the concept of the chemical footprint, which quantifies the potential of chemical mixtures to affect water quality - specifically what chance of survival aquatic organisms such as fish, crustaceans, and algae have at a particular site. The chemical footprint is calculated by relating the concentration of a chemical at a site to the expected effect. The values for the chemicals detected are then summed. For each of these groups of organisms, there is a scientific limit value. Exceedances of this value may support the disappearance of vulnerable species from the ecosystem. The scientific limit values were exceeded in 74% of the samples tested. The risk is particularly high for crustaceans; at 15% of the sites surveyed, it is even acute, which means that the animals have little chance of survival at these sites. 

The UFZ researchers conclude that despite many improvement measures, there are still too many chemicals in European waters. At many sites, the limit values are exceeded. "Our data also show that it is not just individual substances but rather the large number of substances that contribute to this problem", says Finckh. It is therefore necessary to include even more chemicals in chemical water monitoring for the implementation of the EU Water Framework Directive because these have not yet been evaluated in an environmental context. More measurement data are also needed. "It is often completely unclear what effects chemicals have on organisms in the water and in what concentrations", says Carmona. In these cases, model-based values have been used; however, these lead to a greater uncertainty than the effect values measured. "Above all, we should be focussing more on their mixtures when assessing chemicals" says Finckh.

The samples were collected between 2016 and 2019 during various sampling campaigns such as the Monitoring of Small Streams (Kleingewässermonitoring - KgM), the Joint Danube Survey 4 (JDS4), a sampling campaign of the International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River in cooperation with the EU SOLUTIONS project, and an Elbe sampling campaign.

Publication:
Saskia Finckh, Eric Carmona, Dietrich Borchardt, Olaf Büttner, Martin Krauss, Tobias Schulze, Soohyun Yang, Werner Brack: Mapping chemical footprints of organic micropollutants in European streams; Environment International, January 2024. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.108371


Further information

Dr. Eric Carmona Martinez
UFZ-Department Exposure Science
eric-carmona.martinez@ufz.de

Saskia Finckh
UFZ-Department Exposure Science
saskia.finckh@ufz.de

UFZ press office

Susanne Hufe
Phone: +49 341 235-1630
presse@ufz.de


In the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), scientists conduct research into the causes and consequences of far-reaching environmental changes. Their areas of study cover water resources, ecosystems of the future, environmental technologies and biotechnologies, the effects of chemicals in the environment, modelling and social-scientific issues. The UFZ employs more than 1,100 staff at its sites in Leipzig, Halle and Magdeburg. It is funded by the Federal Government, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt.

www.ufz.de

The Helmholtz Association contributes to solving major challenges facing society, science and the economy with top scientific achievements in six research fields: Energy; Earth and Environment; Health; Key Technologies; Matter; and Aeronautics, Space and Transport. With some 39,000 employees in 19 research centres, the Helmholtz Association is Germany’s largest scientific organisation.

www.helmholtz.de
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