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Evaluation of factors influencing annual occurrence, bioaccumulation, and biomagnification of antibiotics in planktonic food webs of a large subtropical river in South China

Authors :
Yiping Tai
Ran Tao
Su Linhui
Xiaomeng Zhang
Nora F.Y. Tam
Yuming Shi
Yang Yang
Luo Bangke
Sai Wang
Tang Jinpeng
Source :
Water research. 170
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Biological pump is important to control the fate and distribution of organic contaminants, particularly in temperate and cold oligotrophic waters. However, it remains largely unknown how factors affect the long-term occurrence and fate of ionogenic organic compounds in subtropical eutrophic waters. The present study aimed to assess biogeochemical and physical factors affecting the annual occurrence, bioaccumulation, and trophic transfer of 14 antibiotics through planktonic food webs in the Pearl River, a large subtropical eutrophic river in China. This was done by carrying out 1-year simultaneous field observations of antibiotic concentrations in five water column compartments and assessing the variability of bioconcentration (BCF), bioaccumulation (BAF), and biomagnification (BMF) factors, which were influenced by plankton biomass, pH and temperature of water columns. The annual mean antibiotic concentration per site ranged from 1014.66 ± 535.66 ng Lāˆ’1 to 1464.63 ± 1075.91 ng Lāˆ’1, and was positively correlated with phytoplankton biomass, but independent of the proximity of the sites to urban areas. Antibiotic occurrences in both phytoplankton and zooplankton were greatly influenced by a biodilution effect. The annual occurrence of antibiotics in the water column was modulated by biological pumps as well as their equilibrium partitioning, and indirectly influenced of eutrophication with pH increased with phytoplankton biomass and phytoplankton life cycling. BAF of antibiotics by plankton had biphasic correlations with temperature (n = 150, R2 = 0.17ā€“0.60, p

Details

ISSN :
18792448
Volume :
170
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3509353e970a2b08ad06d514bbaf5b3e