Contribution of treated sewage to nutrients and PFAS in rivers within Australia’s most important drinking water catchment

Katherine G. Warwick, Michelle M. Ryan, Helen E. Nice, Ian A. Wright

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Abstract

This study investigated the contribution that treated effluent from five sewage treatment plants (STPs) made to water and sediment quality in rivers within Sydney’s Warragamba Dam catchment. Warragamba Dam is the main water supply for Australia’s largest city, supplying 90% of water for >5 million people. The catchment rivers are important habitats for biodiversity. The study was prompted by an earlier investigation that discovered elevated perfluorooctane sulfonate PFOS in the liver of a platypus found in a river in the Warragamba catchment. At the site where the PFOS-contaminated platypus was collected, the river sediment had a maximum PFAS content of 8300 ng kg−1. This study collected water upstream and downstream of five STPs and from STP discharges. River sediment samples were collected downstream of STPs for per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Water attributes included major ions, salinity, nitrogen, phosphorus, metals, and PFAS. Our study confirmed that STP effluent discharges contributed to river nutrient concentrations favourable to algae. The mean total nitrogen (TN) below STP outfalls was 2820 µg L−1, exceeding catchment guideline (TN < 250 µg L−1) by an order of magnitude. PFAS were detected in 65% of STP effluent samples and in 76.5% of river sediment samples.

Original languageEnglish
Article number182
Number of pages19
JournalUrban Science
Volume9
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Keywords

  • drinking water guidelines
  • ecological health
  • emerging contaminants
  • environmental regulation
  • nutrient pollution
  • PFAS
  • STP
  • water quality

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