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Pharmaceuticals in biota: the impact of wastewater treatment plant effluents on fish in Australia

Minna Saaristo, Simon Sharp, Robert McKenzie, Andrea Hinwood

Environmental Pollution(2024)

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Abstract
Globally, pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) are detected in surface waters receiving wastewater, yet their presence in biota, remain largely understudied. To address this, we conducted a study that measured 46 PPCPs in spot water samples and fish caught up- and downstream from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in Victoria, Australia. We sampled 15 sites located along four waterways following a 3-site design: WWTP-discharge(‘hotspot’), ‘upstream’(∼2km) and ‘downstream’(∼2km). Spot water and fish were also sampled at reference sites >100km from WWTP discharge (n=3). Additionally, spot water samples were taken from WWTP effluent outflows (n=3). From each locality, we analysed 3-12 fish (n=131 total). In waterways, passive samplers (POCIS;∼28d, n=19 PPCPs) were also deployed. Individual fish (axial muscle) and water were analysed with LC-MS-MS. We found that PPCP concentrations in environmental surface water ranged from<0.02-0.97μg/L. In WWTP effluent, the range was <0.02-1.4μg/L. Of the 46 PPCPs analysed, 12 were detected in spot water samples and five in fish. In water, the highest concentration detected was for antidepressant venlafaxine (3μg/L). The most frequently detected PPCPs: venlafaxine (54.9%), metoprolol (41.2%), propranolol (29.4%), carbamazepine (29.4%), caffeine (17.6%) and sulfamethoxazole (17.6%). Out of 131 fish analysed, 35 fish had detectable levels of PPCPs in the muscle tissue. The highest muscle concentrations were: venlafaxine (150μg/kg, redfin perch), and sertraline (100μg/kg, eel). Bioaccumulation factors ranged from 104-341L/kg for venlafaxine in redfins, 21-1,260L/kg for carbamazepine in redfins and eels, and 367-3,333L/kg for sertraline in eels. Based on our human health risk calculations for venlafaxine, carbamazepine, sertraline, triclosan, and caffeine, consumption of fish does not pose a significant risk to human health. Despite this, most of the detected PPCPs in surface waters exceeded 10ng/L trigger value, which has led to further investigations by EPA. Our study highlights the need for using multiple lines of evidence for estimating risks of PPCPs.
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Key words
aquatic organisms,contaminants of concern,direct and indirect effects,ecotoxicology,endocrine disrupting chemicals
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