Journal Article

Assessing Pollution Mitigation in Transboundary Waters Through Biosorption Technique in Rural Andean Bolivia

This open-access article belongs to the Special Issue Observation & Modelling of Past, Current & Future Water Resources in Transboundary River System.

Date Published
17 Mar 2026
Authors
Alejandra Paz Rios Paula Cecilia Soto-Rios Cristhian Carrasco Brenda Acevedo-Juárez Laura Mamani-Garcia Nidhi Nagabhatla
Journal
Water, 18, MDPI, 17-03-2026
External link

Heavy metal pollution from mining activities and urban runoff poses a serious threat to public health and aquatic ecosystems in vulnerable communities around the Bolivia–Peru transboundary Lake Titicaca basin. This study evaluates the use of two abundant wetland plants—totora (Schoenoplectus californicus) and reed (Phragmites australis)—as low-cost, locally available biosorbents for the removal of dissolved iron (Fe2+) from the Pallina River, a major contaminant source to Cohana Bay. Monitoring data from Bolivia’s Ministry of Environment and Water (2019–2022) revealed Fe2+ concentrations exceeding the national legal limit (0.3 mg/L) by more than 20 times during the dry season. Laboratory experiments using synthetic Fe2+ solutions (20 mg/L) optimized biosorption conditions, identifying pH 5, 4–6 g/L biomass, fine particle size (0.15–0.212 mm), and a 3 h contact time as optimal. Both plants followed pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherms. Totora showed superior performance, achieving a maximum capacity of 7.8 mg/g compared to reed’s 2.9 mg/g. Continuous-flow column tests removed up to 95% of Fe2+ from synthetic water. When applied to real Pallina River water, totora achieved 50% Fe2+ removal despite reduced efficiency due to competing organic matter. The findings demonstrate the potential of totora-based biosorption as a scalable, nature-based solution for transboundary water management. The policy implications of this study are profound under the national and global water and wetland governance mechanisms and transboundary frameworks like the Binational Autonomous Authority of Lake Titicaca (ALT, est. 1996) and Ramsar Convention.

This research demonstrates that using locally available wetland plants as biosorbents is a practical and promising strategy to complement conventional treatment, especially in rural, resource-constrained settings. At the same time, the study also clarifies the limits of biosorption under complex environmental conditions, including competition among metals, reduced efficiency in natural matrices, and sensitivity to hydrodynamic design. Rather than presenting biosorption as a standalone solution, the results position totora-based systems as a nature-based, low-cost solution complement to regulatory measures and conventional treatment in transboundary watersheds. Overall, the paper provides both quantitative evidence and operational guidance to support the integration of biosorption into broader pollution control and management strategies in Latin American highland basins, with direct relevance for Lake Titicaca.

Suggested citation: Alejandra Paz Rios, Paula Cecilia Soto-Rios, Cristhian Carrasco, Brenda Acevedo-Juárez, Laura Mamani-Garcia and Nidhi Nagabhatla. "Assessing Pollution Mitigation in Transboundary Waters Through Biosorption Technique in Rural Andean Bolivia," Water 18 (2026) https://doi.org/10.3390/w18060703