4.7 Article

Responses of Ruditapes philippinarum to contamination by pharmaceutical drugs under ocean acidification scenario

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 824, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153591

Keywords

Pharmaceutical drugs; Bivalves; Ocean acidification; Biomarkers; Climate change

Funding

  1. National Funds through the Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT) [SFRH/BD/110218/2015]
  2. Fundo Social Europeu (FSE)
  3. Programa Operacional Capital Humano (POCH)
  4. European Union (UE)
  5. FCT [CEECIND/00007/2017]
  6. project BISPECIAl: BIvalveS under Polluted Environment and ClImate chAnge - FEDER, through COMPETE2020 -Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalizacao (POCI) [PTDC/CTA-AMB/28425/2017 (POCI-01-0145FEDER-028425)]
  7. FCT/MCTES
  8. CESAM [UIDP/50017/2020+UIDB/50017/2020+ LA/P/0094/2020]
  9. Integrated Programme of SR&TD Smart Valorization of Endogenous Marine Biological Resources Under a Changing Climate [Centro-01-0145-FEDER-000018]
  10. Centro 2020 program
  11. Portugal 2020
  12. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund

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This study aimed to evaluate the impacts of pharmaceutical drugs and acidification on edible clams. The results showed that the combination of drugs had fewer impacts on the clams compared to when the drugs were acting alone. Acidification had negative effects on the clams, but it did not enhance the toxicity when combined with pharmaceutical drugs.
In coastal systems, organisms are exposed to a multitude of stressors whose interactions and effects are poorly studied. Pharmaceutical drugs and Climate Change consequences, such as lowered pH, are examples of stressors affecting marine organisms, as bivalves. Although a vast literature is available for the effects of these stressors when acting individually, very limited information exists on the impacts that the combination of both can have on marine bivalves. For this reason, this study aimed to evaluate the impacts of a simulated ocean acidification scenario (control pH, 8.0; lowered pH, pH 7.6) on the effects of the antiepileptic carbamazepine (CBZ, 1 mu g/L) and the antihistamine cetirizine (CTZ, 0.6 mu g/L), when acting individually and combined (CBZ + CTZ), on the edible clam Ruditapes philippinarum. After 28 days of exposure, drug concentrations, bioconcentration factors and biochemical parameters related to the clams' metabolic capacity and oxidative stress were evaluated. The results showed that R. philippinarum clams responded differently to pharmaceutical drugs depending on the pH tested, influencing both bioconcentration and biological responses. In general, drug combined treatments showed fewer impacts than drugs acting alone, and acidification seemed to activate at a higher extension the elimination processes that were not activated under control pH. Also, lowered pH per se exerted negative impacts (e.g., cellular damage) on R. philippinarum and the combination with pharmaceutical drugs did not enhance the toxicity.

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