Department of Biosystems Engineering, University of Manitoba, E2-376 Engineering and Information Technology Complex (EITC), 75A Chancellor's Circle, Winnipeg, MB R3T 5V6, Canada.
International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), 111 Lombard Avenue, Suite 325, Winnipeg, MB R3B 0T4, Canada.
Sci Total Environ. 2023 Apr 20;870:161876. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161876. Epub 2023 Jan 27.
Antibiotics in wastewater are a growing environmental concern. Increased prescription and consumption rates have resulted in higher antibiotic wastewater concentration. Conventional wastewater treatment methods are often ineffective at antibiotic removal. Given the environmental risk of antibiotics and associated antibiotic resistant genes (ARGs), finding methods of improving antibiotic removal from wastewater is of great importance. Phytoremediation of antibiotics in wastewater, facilitated through constructed wetlands, has been explored in a growing number of studies. To assess the removal efficiency and treatment mechanisms of plants and microorganisms within constructed wetlands for specific antibiotics of major antibiotic classes, the present review paper considered and evaluated data from the most recent published research on the topics of bench scale hydroponic, lab and pilot scale constructed wetland, and full scale constructed wetland antibiotic remediation. Additionally, microbial and enzymatic antibiotic degradation, antibiotic-ARG correlation, and plant effect on ARGs were considered. It is concluded from the present review that plants readily uptake sulfonamide, macrolide, tetracycline, and fluoroquinolone antibiotics and that constructed wetlands are an effective applied phytoremediation strategy for the removal of antibiotics from wastewater through the mechanisms of microbial biodegradation, root sorption, plant uptake, translocation, and metabolization. More research is needed to better understand the effect of plants on microbial community and ARGs. This paper serves as a synthesis of information that will help guide future research and applied use of constructed wetlands in the field antibiotic phytoremediation and wastewater treatment.
废水中的抗生素是一个日益严重的环境问题。处方和消费率的增加导致了抗生素废水浓度的升高。传统的废水处理方法通常对去除抗生素效果不佳。鉴于抗生素及其相关抗生素抗性基因(ARGs)的环境风险,寻找改善废水中抗生素去除的方法非常重要。通过人工湿地进行废水中抗生素的植物修复,在越来越多的研究中得到了探索。为了评估人工湿地中植物和微生物对主要抗生素类别的特定抗生素的去除效率和处理机制,本综述考虑并评估了最近关于水培床、实验室和中试规模人工湿地以及全规模人工湿地抗生素修复的 bench scale hydroponic、lab 和 pilot scale constructed wetland、full scale constructed wetland 抗生素修复的研究中数据。此外,还考虑了微生物和酶促抗生素降解、抗生素-ARGs 相关性以及植物对 ARGs 的影响。本综述得出的结论是,植物容易吸收磺胺类、大环内酯类、四环素类和氟喹诺酮类抗生素,人工湿地是一种有效的应用植物修复策略,可通过微生物生物降解、根系吸附、植物吸收、转运和代谢等机制从废水中去除抗生素。需要进一步的研究来更好地了解植物对微生物群落和 ARGs 的影响。本文是对信息的综合,将有助于指导未来人工湿地在抗生素植物修复和废水处理领域的研究和应用。