0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

High Spatiotemporal Model-Based Tracking and Environmental Risk-Exposure of Wastewater-Derived Pharmaceuticals across River Networks in Saxony, Germany

Water 2023 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Geovanni Teran-Velasquez, Björn Helm, Peter Krebs

Summary

This is an environmental engineering study modeling how pharmaceuticals from wastewater treatment plants travel through river networks in Saxony, Germany; it is not a microplastics research paper.

Study Type Environmental

Wastewater treatment plants represent relevant point sources of environmental-adverse pharmaceuticals in river systems. Extensive monitoring and substance-routing models are crucial for environmental risk assessment and river planning. However, most current models assume long-term and large spatial averaged values of pharmaceutical consumption and river discharge flows. This study describes a detailed tracking of pharmaceutical occurrence across river networks with high spatiotemporal resolution to assist better environmental risk assessments. Using high spatiotemporal prescription data of four (pseudo-) persistent pharmaceuticals and river discharge characterization, an adjusted graph-theory-based model was implemented to efficiently evaluate the impact of the effluents of 626 wastewater treatment plants across nine river networks located in Saxony, Germany. Multisite calibration results demonstrated the model capability to satisfactorily predict daily pharmaceutical loads and concentrations with high spatial discretization. Based on minimal river dilution and mean predicted concentrations, the risk exposure revealed carbamazepine and ciprofloxacin as the most critical pharmaceuticals and Vereinigte Mulde as the most risk-exposed river network with up to 34.0% and 23.7% of its river length exceeding half and the total of ecotoxicological criteria, respectively. In comparison, other river networks showed less than 23.5% and 15.0% of their river lengths exceeding half and the total of ecotoxicological criteria of all four selected pharmaceuticals, respectively.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

GLOBAL-FATE: A GIS-based model for assessing contaminantsfate in the global river network

A global computational model was developed to trace how pharmaceutical compounds consumed by people flow through rivers worldwide after passing through wastewater treatment. The model framework is adaptable to other contaminants, including microplastics, for global pollution mapping.

Article Tier 2

On modeling the fate of microplastics along river networks

Researchers developed and applied a modeling framework to simulate the fate and transport of microplastics along river network systems, treating rivers as key conduits transferring land-based microplastic pollution to marine environments. The model accounted for particle ingestion risks to aquatic organisms and evaluated the long-term persistence and transport dynamics of microplastics across freshwater networks.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic particle emission from wastewater treatment plant effluents into river networks in Germany: Loads, spatial patterns of concentrations and potential toxicity

Researchers estimated annual microplastic particle emissions from wastewater treatment plants into Germany's ten major river basins and analyzed spatial concentration patterns across stream orders. The study found that while treatment plants are point sources of microplastic pollution, the spatial organization of facilities along river networks creates predictable downstream concentration patterns with potential ecological implications.

Article Tier 2

Direkte Mikro- und Makroplastiktransportmessungen an großen und mittleren Flüssen sowie im Ablauf von Kläranlagen

This German-language study presents direct measurements of micro- and macroplastic transport in large and medium-sized rivers as well as wastewater treatment plant effluents. It addresses a research gap in freshwater plastic transport quantification, providing empirical data on how rivers carry plastics toward marine environments.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic transport in European river networks

Researchers estimated the average annual load of microplastics transported to seas and oceans from 125 European catchments by coupling a mass balance model with a graph-theory river network model incorporating wastewater treatment plant effluents, surface runoff, and combined sewer overflows.

Share this paper