Assessment of marine macroalgae potential for gadolinium removal from contaminated aquatic systems

Gadolinium (Gd) is a rare earth associated with hospital and urban wastewaters due to its application as a contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging. In this work, the uptake of Gd from contaminated seawater by three living marine macroalgae, Ulva lactuca (Chlorophyta), Fucus spiralis (Phaeophyt...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2020-12, Vol.749, p.141488, Article 141488
Hauptverfasser: Ferreira, Nicole, Ferreira, Adriana, Viana, Thainara, Lopes, Cláudia B., Costa, Marcelo, Pinto, João, Soares, José, Pinheiro-Torres, José, Henriques, Bruno, Pereira, Eduarda
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gadolinium (Gd) is a rare earth associated with hospital and urban wastewaters due to its application as a contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging. In this work, the uptake of Gd from contaminated seawater by three living marine macroalgae, Ulva lactuca (Chlorophyta), Fucus spiralis (Phaeophyta) and Gracilaria sp. (Rhodophyta) was studied along 72 h. Surface analysis (FTIR), water content, kinetic modelling, and Gd quantification in seawater and biomass were performed. All species were able to accumulate Gd from seawater with 10, 157, and 500 μg Gd L−1, although green and red macroalgae performed better, following the order: green > red > brown. Removal efficiencies reached 85%, corresponding to a bioconcentration factor of 1700. In more complex solutions that intended to mimic real contaminated environments, namely mixtures with other rare earth elements (Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Eu, Tb, Dy), and with potentially toxic elements commonly found in wastewaters (Cr, Ni, Cu, Cd, Hg, Pb), at two salinities (10 and 30), the macroalgae kept its efficiency: 84% and 88% of removal by green and red macroalgae, respectively. Overall, findings evidence that living macroalgae could be a countermeasure to the increasing anthropogenic enrichment of Gd observed in the aquatic environment. [Display omitted] •Gadolinium uptake by 3 living macroalgae under realistic conditions was studied.•Removal went up to 88% and bioconcentration up to 1700 (dose-reliant accumulation).•Surface area, protein content and metabolism explained F. spiralis worst performance.•Potentially toxic elements enhanced removal while rare earths slightly inhibited it.•No noticeable physiological changes in macroalgae were observed.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141488