Version 2 2020-01-13, 22:45Version 2 2020-01-13, 22:45
Version 1 2019-08-08, 02:52Version 1 2019-08-08, 02:52
journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-13, 22:45authored byLiping Pang, Beth Robson, Kata Farkas, Erin McGill, Arvind Varsani, Lea Gillot, Jinhua Li, Phillip Abraham
<p>With the intensification of human
activities, fresh water resources are increasingly being exposed to
contamination from effluent disposal to land. Thus, there is a greater need to
identify the sources and pathways of water contamination to enable the
development of better mitigation strategies. To track discharges of domestic
effluent into soil and groundwater, 10 synthetic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA)
tracers were developed in this study. Laboratory column experiment and field
groundwater and soil lysimeter studies were carried out spiking DNA with
oxidation-pond domestic effluent. The selected DNA tracers were compared with a
non-reactive bromide (Br) tracer with respect to their relative mass
recoveries, speeds of travel and dispersions using the method of temporal
moments. In intact stony soil and gravel aquifer media, the dsDNA tracers
typically showed earlier breakthrough and less dispersion than the Br tracer, and
underwent mass reduction. This suggests that the dsDNA tracers were
predominantly transported through the network of larger pores or preferential
flow paths. Effluent tracking experiments in soil and groundwater demonstrated
that the dsDNA tracers were readily detectable in effluent-contaminated soil
and groundwater using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. DNA tracer spiked
in the effluent at quantities of 36 μg was detected in groundwater 37 m
down-gradient at a concentration 3-orders of magnitude above the detection
limit. It is anticipated it could be detected at far greater distances. Our
findings suggest that synthetic dsDNA tracers are promising for tracking
effluent discharges in soils and groundwater but further studies are needed to
investigate DNA-effluent interaction and the impact of subsurface environmental
conditions on DNA attenuation. With further validation, synthetic dsDNA
tracers, especially when multiple DNA tracers are used concurrently, can be an
effective new tool to track effluent discharge in soils and groundwater,
providing spatial estimation on the presence or absence of contamination
sources and pathways.</p>
Funding
Royal Society of New Zealand (Marsden Fund Contract ESR-1001)
New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (Groundwater Assimilative Capacity Programme, Contract C03X100)