Citation
Masood, Najat Abdullah Ebrahim
(2017)
Distribution and source of hydrocarbons in the sediments of the Selangor River, Malaysia.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
Environmental pollutants such as anthropogenic hydrocarbons (AHs) are known to
result from increased urbanization and act as indicators of anthropogenic activity.
Hydrocarbons contamination is a great global concern due to their negative effects on
human health and environmental consequences, such as toxic, mutagenic, carcinogenic,
teratogenic and hepatotoxic effects. Consequently, a clear understanding and
monitoring of distribution, sources, pathways and fate in the environment and
ecosystems of AHs is of high importance in sediment samples collected from Kuala
Selangor River, which is located on the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia, in order to
determine the distributions and sources of hopanes, alkanes, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs), and linear alkylbenzenes (LABs) in four periods. The sediment
samples were collected from the river and its estuary during the rainy inter-monsoonal
period, the dry inter-monsoonal period, the North-East Monsoon (NEM) period, and
the South-West Monsoon (SWM) period because during these periods the samples are
expected to contain varying amounts of pollutants. The collected samples were
homogenized, freeze-dried, extracted, cleanup, fractionated and analyzed using gas
chromatography mass spectrometry. The results of this study revealed that the
concentrations of PAHs for the 13 sampling sites pooled over the four studied periods
ranged from 341.33 ng g-1 dw (in the SWM period) to 651.64 ng g-1 dw (in the wet
inter-monsoon period) with the mean value of 471.05 ng g-1 dw. In other respects, the
outcomes of the one-way ANOVA indicated that the differences between the PAHs
among the sampling stations were significant (p < 0.05). The diagnostic ratios of
individual PAHs in sediments indicated both petrogenic and pyrogenic origin PAHs
with significant dominance of pyrogenic source. The comparison of PAHs with
Sediment Quality Guidelines (SQGs) indicates that the levels of the PAHs in the
surface sediments of Selangor River are unlikely to cause any adverse biological
effects to the aquatic organisms, including those that are closely associated with
sediments. No significant correlation was found between AHs and organic carbon,
which means that the distribution of AHs was not affected by the organic carbon
content. In the four studied periods, the concentrations of the LABs in Selangor River
ranged from 23.70 to 113.30 ng g-1 dw with an arithmetical mean of 54.04 ± 22.34 ng g-1 dw. The average concentration of the total LABs was found to be higher in the wet
season (65.20 ± 25.04 ng g-1 dw) than in the other seasons. The average values of the
ratio of long-chain to short-chain LAB (L/S), C13/C12, and the ratio of Internal to
External isomers (I/E) in the sediments of Selangor River during the four studied
periods were 2.03 ± 1.06, 1.74 ± 0.28, and 0.6 ± 0.17, respectively, indicating inputs of
LABs from direct wastewater discharges. The I/E ratio decreased from upstream to
downstream of Selangor River. This indicates that the sedimentary LABs downstream
of the river (estuary) were more degraded than those in the upstream. The
concentrations of total alkanes (nC10-nC36) ranged from 967 to 3,711 μg g-1 dw in
sediment samples. In addition, the results of this study indicated that the alkanes in the
sediment samples originated from diverse sources. Fresh oil, terrestrial plants (riverine
area), and heavy/degraded oil (estuarine area) were the predominant source of alkanes
in sediments. The alkanes originating from higher plants were mostly predominant in
sediments from the stations located in upper parts of the river. The levels of hopanes
ranged from 235 to 1,044 ng g-1 dw in sediments. The C29/C30 hopanes ratios were
similar with those of used crankcase oil and Middle East Crude Oil (MECO),
suggesting MECO as a major source of petroleum hydrocarbons (PHCs) in the
sediments of Selangor River. In sum, presence of selected hydrocarbons (PAHs, LABs,
alkanes, and hopanes) in the sediments of Selangor River, Malaysia, was studied during
four periods. The results show that the agricultural, urban, and industrial activities in
the state of Selangor, coupled with a high population growth, have caused deterioration
in the quality of its river water. The concentrations of the investigated hydrocarbons
varied from sampling site to another and from one period to another. Further studies
should be conducted to address this problem.
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