Accumulation of steroid hormones in soil and its adjacent aquatic environment from a typical intensive vegetable cultivation of North China

Steroid hormones released from manure agricultural application are a matter of global concern. The residual levels of steroid hormones were studied in a typical intensive vegetable cultivation area in northeast China, with a long history of heavy manure application. Seven steroids (estrone, 17α-estr...

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Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 538; pp. 423 - 430
Main Authors Zhang, Feng-Song, Xie, Yun-Feng, Li, Xue-Wen, Wang, Dai-Yi, Yang, Lin-Sheng, Nie, Zhi-Qiang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.12.2015
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Summary:Steroid hormones released from manure agricultural application are a matter of global concern. The residual levels of steroid hormones were studied in a typical intensive vegetable cultivation area in northeast China, with a long history of heavy manure application. Seven steroids (estrone, 17α-estradiol, 17β-estradiol, estriol, testosterone, androstendione and progesterone) were analyzed from soil sampled from vegetable greenhouses, from sediments and water from the adjacent drainage ditch and from the groundwater. The results showed that target steroids were detected in the soil samples, with detection frequencies varying from 3.13 to 100%. The steroid concentrations varied substantially in soils, ranging from below the detection limit to 109.7μg·kg−1. Three steroids—progesterone, androstendione and estrone—were found to have relatively high residue concentrations in soil, with maximum concentrations of 109.7, 9.83 and 13.30μg·kg−1, respectively. In adjacent groundwater, all the steroids, with the exception of estrone, were detected in one or more of the 13 groundwater samples. The concentrations of steroids in groundwater ranged from below the method detection limit to 2.38ng·L−1. Six of the seven (excluding androstendione) were detected in drainage ditch water samples, with concentrations ranging from below the detection limit to 14ng·L−1. Progesterone, androstendione and estrone accumulated relatively easily in soils; their concentrations in groundwater were lower than those of other steroids. The concentrations of testosterone and estriol were relatively low in soil, while in groundwater were higher than those of other steroids. The residual levels of steroids in soil and groundwater showed a clear spatial variation in the study area. The residual levels of steroid hormones in soil varied substantially between differently planted greenhouses. Accumulation of steroid hormones in (a) greenhouse soil, (b) ditch sediment, (c) ditch water and (d) groundwater. [Display omitted] •Seven steroids were detected in soil and adjacent drainage ditch sediment.•Six steroids were found in drainage ditch water and groundwater.•Progesterone, androstendione and estrone accumulated relatively easily in soils.•Testosterone and estriol were easily leached to groundwater.•Concentrations of steroids in soil and groundwater were highly spatially variable.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.08.067