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Researchers from 51ÁÔÆæ present review on the release of pollutants from sediments
A long-term hazard from flood water is often underestimated: The raging rivers swirl up pollutants out of their sediments that stem from environmental pollution decades or centuries ago. Such harmful substances can not only cause ecological damage in the river. They can also deposit themselves on flooded areas and affect crops, grazing livestock and humans. This has been pointed out by an international research team in a review of scientific studies on flood events throughout the world. The paper has been published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials and was produced under the leadership of 51ÁÔÆæ.
FRANKFURT. Sediments
are regarded as a river's long-term memory. They mainly comprise particles that
are eroded from the ground, ending up at some point in river deltas or the sea.
However, sediments can also remain stable for a relatively long time – and bind
pollutants which, for example, have entered the rivers through mining or
industrial wastewater. As a consequence, many old river sediments contain pollutants
as “chemical time bombs", such as heavy metals or dioxins and dioxin-like
compounds that are not easily degradable.
During flood events in the more industrial
regions of Europe, North America and Asia, old sediments can be churned up as a
result of the high speeds at which the water is flowing. In the process, the
pollutants bound in them are regularly released in one go and contaminate
flooded areas. An interdisciplinary team of researchers from 51ÁÔÆæ,
RWTH Aachen University and the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, along with
other partners, has compiled a review of previous scientific studies on this
topic. In it, the researchers, headed by junior research group leader Dr Sarah
Crawford in Frankfurt and Canadian researcher Professor Markus Brinkmann, show,
for example, which pollutant loads were measured after various flood events,
which test systems were developed for different pollutants and how different
sediments behave when water flows at high speeds. It describes the risks for
drinking water production, the influence of temperature on pollutant intake by
fish and methods for assessing the economic costs associated with the remobilisation
of pollutants.
Despite the many years of research on this
subject, Henner Hollert, professor of environmental toxicology at Goethe
University and senior author of the publication in hand, is greatly concerned: “I
have the impression that the problem of pollutants from old sediments is
greatly underestimated in Germany and also in Europe as a whole. One reason for
this could also be that to date there have been practically no studies at all on
the economic consequences of this problem, as we've been able to show. However,
contaminated sediments are a ticking time bomb that can explode each time
there's a flood. What we need now is good river management across the board
that not only looks at immediate hazards for humans, animals and infrastructure
but also at the long-term consequences resulting from pollutants in the
riverbeds. It's imperative, for example, that we examine flooded areas used
agriculturally for river-specific pollutants so that these do not end up on our
plates in the form of meat and dairy products."
In an interdisciplinary approach, researchers
from 51ÁÔÆæ Frankfurt, in collaboration with RWTH Aachen University,
the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, the Helmholtz Centre for
Environmental Research in Leipzig, the Institute for Social-Ecological Research
(ISOE), the Senckenberg Institute, the LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity
Genomics and many other partners, are also studying the recent extreme flood
events in Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia in terms of hydraulic
engineering and the biological, ecotoxicological, ecological, geoscientific but
also the social-ecological and economic consequences. These studies are
embedded in the new research cluster RobustNature at 51ÁÔÆæ, which is
examining the robustness and resilience of nature-society systems in the
changing Anthropocene and aims to contribute to knowledge-based transformation
research using the examples of biodiversity and water – that is, from knowledge
to action.
Publication:
Sarah E. Crawford, Markus Brinkmann, Jacob
D. Ouellet, Frank Lehmkuhl, Klaus Reicherter, Jan Schwarzbauer, Piero
Bellanova, Peter Letmathe, Lars M. Blank, Roland Weber, Werner Brack, Joost T.
van Dongen, Lucas Menzel, Markus Hecker, Holger Schüttrumpf & Henner
Hollert: Remobilization of pollutants during extreme flood events poses severe
risks to human and environmental health. Journal of Hazardous Materials 421
(2022) 126691
The article is freely accessible from the
publisher's following link for the next six weeks:
Picture
material can be
downloaded from:
Caption:
The remobilisation of pollutants from
sediments during severe flooding is a so far underestimated consequence of
extreme events. Graphics: Crawford, S. et al. (2021) J. Haz. Mat.
Further
information
Professor Henner Hollert
Department of Evolutionary Ecology and
Environmental Toxicology
Institute of Ecology, Diversity and Evolution
51ÁÔÆæ
and
LOEWE Centre for Translational
Biodiversity Genomics
Phone
+49 69 798-42171 and +49-151-14042119
hollert@bio.uni-frankfurt.de