Long‐term exposure of Allonais inaequalis to a mixture of antibiotics in freshwater and synthetic wastewater matrices: Reproduction, recovery, and swimming responses
Gleyson B. Castro, David S. Alexandre, Aline C. Bernegossi, Yohanna A. F. Bezerra, Mateus C. Fonsêca, Marcelo Zaiat, Juliano J. Corbi - Water Science and Technology
- Ecological Modeling
- Waste Management and Disposal
- Pollution
- Environmental Chemistry
Abstract
Antibiotics from sulfonamide, fluoroquinolone, and diaminopyrimidine classes are widely used in human and veterinary medicine, and their combined occurrence in the aquatic environment is increasing around the world. In parallel, the understanding of how mixtures of these compounds affect non‐target species from tropical freshwaters is scarce. Thus, this work aimed to study the long‐term reproductive, recovery, and swimming effects of mixtures of 12 antibiotics from three different classes (up to 10 μg L−1) added to freshwater (FWM) and synthetic wastewater (SWM) matrices on freshwater worm
Practitioner Points
A mixture of sulfonamide, fluoroquinolone, and diaminopyrimidine antibiotics in freshwater affects the offspring production of After the 10‐day antibiotic exposure, the reproduction of The swimming speed of the worms does not change after 10 days of exposure to the antibiotic mixture. The concentration of dissolved solids can limit the natural degradation of sulfonamide, fluoroquinolone, and diaminopyrimidine antibiotics in the aquatic environment.