Title Insights into the distribution, partitioning and influencing factors of antibiotics concentration and ecological risk in typical bays of the East China Sea
Authors Li, Feifei
Wen, Donghui
Bao, Yingyu
Huang, Bei
Mu, Qinglin
Chen, Lyujun
Affiliation Tsinghua Univ, Sch Environm, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, Coll Environm Sci & Engn, Beijing, Peoples R China
Zhejiang Marine Ecol & Environm Monitoring Ctr, Hangzhou, Peoples R China
Zhejiang Prov Key Lab Water Sci & Technol, Hangzhou, Peoples R China
Keywords PEARL RIVER ESTUARY
VETERINARY ANTIBIOTICS
SOUTH CHINA
SPATIOTEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION
COASTAL ENVIRONMENT
AQUATIC ENVIRONMENT
YELLOW-RIVER
BOHAI SEA
WATER
SEDIMENTS
Issue Date Feb-2022
Publisher CHEMOSPHERE
Abstract In order to obtain in-depth insight of the behavioral fate and ecological risks of antibiotics in coastal environment, this study investigated the distribution, partitioning and primary influencing factors of antibiotics in water and sediment in the East China Sea. After quantification of 77 target antibiotics in 6 categories, ten antibiotics were detected simultaneously with a detection frequency >50.0% in water and sediment; the concentrations of these ten antibiotics were 0.1-1508.0 ng L-1 and 0.01-9.4 ng g(-1) in water and dry sediment, respectively. Sulfadiazine and Azithromycin (Pseudo partitioning coefficient were 28-3814 L kg(-1) and 21-2405 L kg(-1), respectively.) had the largest partitioning coefficient between sediment and water. In addition, pseudo partitioning coefficient of Sulfadiazine and Clindamycin were higher than the values of corresponding equilibrium partitioning constant (K-d), which would likely cause them to re-release from sediment to water. Compared to the physiochemical properties of the sediment, water quality has a greater impact on antibiotic partitioning. We found that the partitioning of antibiotics was significantly positively correlated with salinity, suspended solids, pH, NH4+-N and Zn; and negatively correlated with temperature, dissolved oxygen, PO43-, chemical oxygen demand, NO3- -N, oil, Cu and Cd. The ecological risks of antibiotics in water and sediment were also evaluated for revealing their relationship with the concentration partitioning of antibiotics. Results showed that the target antibiotics mainly pose ecological risks to Daphnia with low and median chronic toxicity risk rather than fish and green algae. The antibiotics in sediment were more chronically toxic to Daphnia than that in water. The risk quotient ratio of sediment and water (RQ(s)/RQ(w)) ranged from 0 to 1154.0, which were exactly opposite of the values of organic carbon normalized partition coefficient (K-oc), suggesting that the physical properties of antibiotics drove the ecological risk allocation of antibiotics in sediment and water.
URI http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/634602
ISSN 0045-6535
DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.132566
Indexed EI
SCI(E)
Appears in Collections: 环境科学与工程学院

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