Abstract

Urbanization is often accompanied by aquatic metal(loid) pollution, which is regulated by dissolved organic matter (DOM). However, the relationships between dissolved metal(loid) concentration and the bulk, chromophoric, and fluorescent DOM in black and odorous urban rivers are still poorly understood. Here, we investigated the dissolved metal(loid) concentrations of Zn, Cu, Cr, As, Pb, and Cd and their correlations with DOM-related parameters in water samples from a polluted urbanized watershed in Shenzhen, China. The results showed that the Zn and Cu concentrations in the mainstream and tributary exceeded the national standards, and the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) was an important source, as indicated by the abrupt concentration increases downstream of the WWTP. The dissolved metal(loid) concentrations were not always significantly correlated with the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration or the ultraviolet absorbance at 254 nm (UV254); however, they were more likely to be correlated with the maximum fluorescence intensity (Fmax) of protein-like fluorescent DOM components. A strong correlation between the Cu/DOC ratio and specific UV254 (SUVA254) previously reported did not exist in the present study. Instead, the Cu/DOC ratio was positively correlated with the Fmax/DOC ratios for protein-like fluorescent DOM components. Our study highlights that protein-like fluorescent DOM may be more important than humic-like fluorescence DOM and chromophoric DOM in terms of interacting with dissolved metal(loid)s in black and odorous urban rivers.

Highlights

  • Dissolved metal(loid) contamination in rivers raises serious concerns worldwide due to the potential toxicity and ecosystem risks [1,2,3]

  • River watershed as an example, the present study investigated the concentration levels of dissolved metal(loid)s and their correlations with the abundances of bulk DOM, chromophoric DOM (CDOM), and fluorescent dissolved organic matter (FDOM) in different water types

  • Our results highlight that in this black and odorous urban river, anthropogenic DOM such as protein-like FDOM play an important role in interacting with dissolved metal(loid)s

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Summary

Introduction

Dissolved metal(loid) contamination in rivers raises serious concerns worldwide due to the potential toxicity and ecosystem risks [1,2,3] Concentrations of these elements are influenced by both natural and anthropogenic factors, such as parent rock weathering, mining, industrial and domestic. The ubiquitous dissolved organic matter (DOM) in aquatic environments is a highly heterogeneous mixture and plays an important role in several processes, such as chelation, solution, precipitation, and bioaccumulation of dissolved metal(loid)s [10,11]. These roles of DOM are often associated with the chemical structure and properties of the DOM [11,12,13]. These groups can have a strong affinity for dissolved metal(loid)s; they can affect the metal(loid)–DOM complexation and metal(loid) behavior in the environment [15,16,17]

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