Abstract

At 13 Ontario cities, representing a variety of populations and sewage treatment processes, grab samples were taken from the sewage treatment plant influent and effluent and from the receiving stream above and below the sewage outfall. The samples, taken once each month from November 1971 to March 1975 were analyzed for nitrilotriacetate (NTA), 9 metals, and phosphorus. From April 1971 to January 1973 household detergents in Canada contained an average of 6% NTA; after March 1973 they contained 15%. This increased usage of NTA was reflected in the NTA content of sewage influents, which rose from a median level of 1.3 mg l −1 before the change to 3.2 mg l −1 after the change. NTA levels in sewage effluent also increased somewhat, but much of the NTA disappeared in the sewage treatment processes. Even with the increased usage of NTA, the receiving streams below the sewage outfall contained only low levels of NTA: 97% of all samples during this period contained less than 0.5 mg l −1, and the median concentration was 0.05 mg l −1. Phosphorus concentrations in the sewages decreased at the time detergent compositions changed. Comparison of metal concentrations before and after the change, as well as metal-NTA correlation coefficients, failed to show clear evidence of an association between NTA concentration and metal concentration.

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