Distribution of Acid-Volatile Sulfides and Simultaneously Extracted Metals in Guanabara Bay: Combination of Anthropogenic, Sedimentological, and Geochemical Processes

Author:

Cordeiro Renato Campello1,Santelli Ricardo Erthal2,Machado Wilson Thadeu do Vale3,Gomes Abilio Soares3,Moreira Luciane Silva3,de Oliveira Rafael Lopes3,Abreu Ilene Matano3,Meniconi Maria de Fatima Guadalupe4

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Federal Fluminense

2. Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

3. Federal Fluminense University: Universidade Federal Fluminense

4. Petrobras

Abstract

Abstract Coastal sedimentary systems are affected by continental and marine metal pollutant inputs associated with different hydrodynamic characteristics and geochemical processes. These include the formation of acid-volatile sulfides (AVS) within sediments, which affects metal bioavailability and associated aquatic biota toxicity risks. Physicochemical changes in these environments in the face of extreme natural or man-made environmental influences can dramatically alter metal bioavailability and toxicity through metal binding and immobilization as insoluble sulfides. Surface sediments from Guanabara Bay, rivers mouth and two mangrove areas were collected and AVS and simultaneously extracted metals Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn, ΣSEM were determined to assess sediment quality. A severe eutrophication history favored AVS concentrations exceeding or close to the sum of SEM concentrations, demonstrating that AVS play an important role in making trace metals unavailable for assimilation by living organisms, mitigating the risks of contamination for the local biota. This eutrophication-driven sulfide accumulation may attenuate the sediment toxicity in sites heavily polluted by metals, while some fewer eutrophic sites became more exposed to metals in excess to AVS.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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