6533b873fe1ef96bd12d4dc7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Pharmaceuticals and other urban contaminants threaten Amazonian freshwater ecosystems

Sara VillaIsabel López-herasAndreu RicoGabriel Silva De Souza NunesAndrea Viviana WaichmanRhaul OliveiraC RizziMarco Vighi

subject

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesAmazonianBiodiversity010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesFreshwater ecosystemFreshwater ecosystemRiversEnvironmental protectionUrbanizationTributaryparasitic diseasesChemical risk assessmentGE1-350CitiesEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Sciencegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAmazon rainforestAmazon RiverFreshwater ecosystemsfood and beveragesQ Science (General)BiodiversityContaminationEnvironmental sciencesWastewaterPharmaceutical PreparationsPharmaceuticalEnvironmental sciencePharmaceuticalsWater Pollutants Chemicalgeographic locationsEnvironmental Monitoring

description

Abstract Urban areas in the Brazilian Amazon have grown at an unprecedented rate during the last years. About 90% of the wastewater produced by these urban areas are discharged untreated into Amazonian freshwater ecosystems, constituting a potential environmental pathway for pharmaceuticals and other chemicals consumed by modern societies (e.g. psychostimulants, personal-care products, hormones). The distribution of these chemicals into the Amazon River and their potential risks for freshwater biodiversity have not been evaluated so far. Here, we show the results of the largest chemical monitoring campaign conducted in the Amazon region. We assessed exposure patterns for 43 pharmaceuticals and other urban contaminants in 40 sampling sites distributed along the Amazon River, three major tributaries (Negro, Tapajos and Tocantins Rivers), and four large cities of the Brazilian Amazon (Manaus, Santarem, Macapa, Belem). We assessed risks for freshwater biodiversity using species sensitivity distributions and mixture toxicity approaches. We found that urban areas constitute important hot-spots for chemical contamination, with mixtures containing up to 40 different compounds and exposure concentrations reaching the world’s maxima for some of them. We show that chemical pollution can result in long-term effects for up to 50–80% of aquatic species next to urban areas. Moreover, we identified several ubiquitous compounds which can be used as tracers of anthropogenic pressure in the Amazon basin. We conclude that the chemical burden created by urbanization significantly contributes to a biodiversity loss in the region and should be further controlled.

10.1016/j.envint.2021.106702http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412021003275