Issue 5, 2014

Toxicity and chemical analyses of airport runoff waters in Poland

Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the ecotoxicological effects of various compounds in complex airport effluents using a chemical and ecotoxicological integrated strategy. The present work deals with the determination of sum of PCBs, PAHs, pesticides, cations, anions, phenols, anionic, cationic, non-ionic detergents, formaldehyde and metals – as well as TOC and conductivity – in runoff water samples collected from 2009 to 2011 at several locations on two Polish international airports. Two microbiotests (Vibrio fischeri bacteria and the crustacean Thamnocephalus platyurus) have been used to determine the ecotoxicity of airport runoff waters. The levels of many compounds exceeded several or even several tens of times the maximum permissible levels. Analysis of the obtained data shows that samples that displayed maximum toxicity towards the bioindicators Vibrio fischeri were not toxic towards Thamnocephalus platyurus. Levels of toxicity towards T. platyurus are strongly correlated with pollutants that originate from the technological operations related to the maintenance of airport infrastructure. The integrated (chemical–ecotoxicological) approach to environmental contamination assessment in and around airports yields extensive information on the quality of the environment. These methodologies can be then used as tools for tracking the environmental fate of these compounds and for assessing the environmental effect of airports. Subsequently, these data will provide a basis for airport infrastructure management.

Graphical abstract: Toxicity and chemical analyses of airport runoff waters in Poland

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Aug 2013
Accepted
03 Jan 2014
First published
06 Jan 2014

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2014,16, 1083-1093

Toxicity and chemical analyses of airport runoff waters in Poland

A. M. Sulej, Ż. Polkowska, L. Wolska, M. Cieszynska and J. Namieśnik, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2014, 16, 1083 DOI: 10.1039/C3EM00448A

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