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Degradation and humification of steroidal estrogens in the soil environment: A review

Chemosphere 2024 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Qianhui Yang, Weishan Liao, Zebin Wei, Rongliang Qiu, Qian Zheng, Qi‐Tang Wu, Y. Chen

Summary

This review examines how steroidal estrogens, a type of endocrine-disrupting pollutant, break down and transform in soil through microbial activity and chemical reactions. Researchers found that soil conditions such as moisture, temperature, and microbial community composition strongly influence how quickly these hormones degrade. The study highlights that understanding estrogen behavior in soil is important for assessing the environmental risk of emerging contaminants, which also include microplastics and antibiotics.

Body Systems

Emerging pollutants are toxic and harmful chemical substances characterized by environmental persistence, bioaccumulation and biotoxicity, which can harm the ecological environment and even threaten human health. There are four categories of emerging pollutants that are causing widespread concern, namely, persistent organic pollutants, endocrine disruptors, antibiotics, and microplastics. The distribution of emerging pollutants has spatial and temporal heterogeneity, which is influenced by factors such as geographical location, climatic conditions, population density, emission amount, etc. Steroidal estrogens (SEs) discussed in this paper belong to the category of endocrine disruptors. There are generally three types of fate for SEs in the soil environment: sorption, degradation and humification. Humification is a promising pathway for the removal of SEs, especially for those that are difficult to degrade. Through humification, these difficult-to-degrade SEs can be effectively transferred or fixed, thus reducing their impact on the environment and organisms. Contrary to the well-studied process of sorption and degradation, the role and promise of the humification process for the removal of SEs has been underestimated. Based on the existing research, this paper reviews the sources, classification, properties, hazards and environmental behaviors of SEs in soil, and focuses on the degradation and humification processes of SEs and the environmental factors affecting their processes, such as temperature, pH, etc. It aims to provide references for the follow-up research of SEs, and advocates further research on the humification of organic pollutants in future studies.

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