Laboratorio de Ecotoxicología y Contaminación Ambiental, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata-CONICET, Dean Funes 3350, Mar del Plata B7600, Argentina.
Department of Environmental Science, Center for Reservoir and Aquatic Systems Research, Baylor University, Waco, TX, 76798, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Feb 1;649:1029-1037. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.08.383. Epub 2018 Aug 28.
Because an understanding of aquatic bioaccumulation of human pharmaceuticals in Latin America is limited, this area was recently identified as a priority environmental quality research need. We examined bioaccumulation of twenty-seven pharmaceuticals, illicit drugs and their metabolites in muscle, liver and gills of multiple fish species (Rhamdia quelen, Hypostomus commersoni, Hoplias lacerdae, Prochilodus lineatus) from an urban river receiving wastewater discharges (Paraná) and a lotic system (Acaraguá) without direct wastewater sources, which runs through a protected area. All samples were analyzed using isotope-dilution liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Caffeine, which was detected up to 13 μg/kg, and antibiotics were consistently detected in all fish. Among antibiotics, erythromycin was ubiquitous (0.7-5.6 μg/kg) but its tissue concentrations were lower than levels of sulfamethoxazole, sulfathiazole and trimethoprim (0.9-5.5 μg/kg), which are used in human medicine, aquaculture and livestock. Erythromycin bioaccumulation in fish is reported here from Argentina for the first time, though levels of antibiotics in edible muscles of these species were lower than the maximum residue limits for human consumption. We observed norfluoxetine, the primary active metabolite of the antidepressant fluoxetine, ranging from 1.1-9.1 μg/kg in fish. We further identified benzoylecgonine, a primary metabolite of cocaine, in fish from both study systems, representing the first observation an illicit drug or associated metabolites bioaccumulation in aquatic life from Argentina. Interestingly, high pharmaceutical levels were observed in fish from the Acaraguá river suggesting their transport into the protected area, from the surrounding lands. Though fish from the Paraná river were sampled near WWTP discharges, pharmaceutical concentrations may have been reduced by hydrological and other environmental conditions, and biological differences among species. These findings, which observed bioaccumulation of select pharmaceuticals, their metabolites and illicit drugs in wild fish sampled inside a protected area, highlight the importance of developing an advanced understanding of urban influences on inland protected watersheds.
由于对拉丁美洲人类药物在水生生物体内的生物积累的了解有限,最近该地区被确定为环境质量研究的优先领域。我们研究了 27 种药物、非法药物及其代谢物在接受废水排放的城市河流(巴拉那河)和无直接废水来源的流动系统(阿卡拉瓜河)中多种鱼类(Rhamdia quelen、Hypostomus commersoni、Hoplias lacerdae、Prochilodus lineatus)肌肉、肝脏和鳃中的生物积累情况,该河流贯穿一个保护区。所有样本均使用同位素稀释液相色谱-串联质谱法进行分析。检测到高达 13μg/kg 的咖啡因和所有鱼类中均存在的抗生素。在抗生素中,红霉素普遍存在(0.7-5.6μg/kg),但其组织浓度低于在人类医学、水产养殖和畜牧业中使用的磺胺甲恶唑、磺胺噻唑和甲氧苄啶(0.9-5.5μg/kg)。这是阿根廷首次报告鱼类中红霉素的生物积累,尽管这些物种可食用肌肉中的抗生素含量低于人类食用的最大残留限量。我们在鱼中观察到了氟西汀的主要活性代谢物去甲氟西汀,浓度为 1.1-9.1μg/kg。我们还在两个研究系统的鱼类中鉴定出可卡因的主要代谢物苯甲酰爱康宁,这是阿根廷首次观察到非法药物或相关代谢物在水生生物中的生物积累。有趣的是,在来自阿卡拉瓜河的鱼类中观察到了高药物水平,这表明它们从周围土地被运输到保护区内。尽管来自巴拉那河的鱼类是在污水处理厂排放口附近采集的,但由于水文和其他环境条件以及物种间的生物差异,药物浓度可能已经降低。这些发现观察到了保护区内野生鱼类中选定药物、其代谢物和非法药物的生物积累,突出了深入了解城市对内陆保护区流域的影响的重要性。