Spatiotemporal distribution and risk assessment of bisphenol A and structurally related phenolic compounds in groundwater around the vicinity of municipal dumpsites in Southwestern Nigeria
Abstract
Leachate infiltration into groundwater is an intensifying environmental and public health concern in many developing countries, where waste disposal systems are poorly engineered. Phenolic contaminants pose significant ecological and human health risks but remain understudied in sub-Saharan Africa. This study investigated the seasonal occurrence, distribution, and associated risks of four phenolic compounds, namely bisphenol A (BPA), hydroquinone (HQ), resorcinol (RE), and benzoquinone (BQ), in groundwater sources near municipal dumpsites across three Southwestern States in Nigeria. Groundwater samples were collected from rural and urban areas across Osun, Oyo, and Lagos States during both rainy and dry seasons. Solid-phase extraction and high-performance liquid chromatography-ultraviolet detector (HPLC-UV) analysis were used to extract and quantify the target analytes, followed by multivariate statistical evaluation, human health risk assessment, and ecological risk assessment. Concentrations of BPA, HQ, RE, and BQ were generally higher during the dry season, especially in Osun and Lagos States. BPA recorded the highest values, peaking at 20.90 mg L−1 in urban Osun. RE and BQ also showed elevated levels during the dry season, particularly in urban Lagos and rural Oyo, respectively. HQ exhibited variable trends, with significant peaks in rural Oyo (11.93 mg L−1) and rural Osun (7.26 mg L−1). Multivariate analysis via principal component revealed clear seasonal differentiation and strong co-loading patterns consistent with leachate-driven contamination processes. Human health risk assessment indicated that estimated daily intakes in children frequently exceeded stipulated limits, while ecological risk assessment identified Daphnia magna as the most sensitive species, with acute and chronic risk quotients exceeding the reference dose in several locations. This study represents the first year-long, multi-state assessment of phenolic contaminants in Nigerian groundwater and provides critical evidence of contamination levels linked to unmanaged waste sites. These findings highlight the urgent need for improved waste management, groundwater protection policies, and expanded toxicological evaluation of phenolic contaminants in rapidly urbanizing regions of sub-Saharan Africa.

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