4.7 Article

The effects of bisphenol A, F and their mixture on algal and cyanobacterial growth: from additivity to antagonism

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 3445-3454

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-020-10329-7

Keywords

Aquatic ecotoxicology; Plastic pollution; Toxic stress; Growth inhibition; Environmental risk assessment; Pollutant degradation

Funding

  1. National Research Agency [L1-7544, N1-0047]

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The study found that S. leopoliensis is more sensitive to BPA and BPF, with both showing comparable toxic potential and similar hazard to phytoplankton. In different concentration ranges, additive effect was observed in P. subcapitata with BPA, while no pronounced combined effect was seen in S. leopoliensis. Comparison suggests that in certain industrial areas, BPA may pose an environmental risk, while BPF does not.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is, due to its widespread use including the production of plastic materials, an ubiquitous pollutant in the aquatic environment. Due to evidence of adverse BPA effects on the environment and human health, its use has been restricted and replaced by analogues such as bisphenol F (BPF). This study examined the toxicity of BPA, BPF and their mixture towards primary producers, the eukaryotic green algaPseudokirchneriella subcapitataand the prokaryotic cyanobacteriumSynechococcus leopoliensis.The results demonstrated thatS. leopoliensisis more sensitive thanP. subcapitata, whereas toxic potential of the two BPs is comparable and represents comparable hazard for phytoplankton. The toxicity of the binary mixture was predicted by different models (concentration addition, independent action, combination index and the isobologram method) and compared to experimental data. Additive effect was observed inP. subcapitataover the whole effect concentration range (EC5-EC90), whereas inS. leopoliensis, no pronounced combined effect was observed. The environmental risk characterisation based on the comparison of reported concentrations of BPA and BPF in surface waters to the predicted no-effect concentration values obtained in this study showed that at certain industrial areas, BPA represents environmental risk, whereas BPF does not. However, BPF concentrations in aquatic environment are expected to increase in the future. To enable environmental risk assessment of BP analogues, more data on the toxicity to aquatic species, including combined effect, as well as data on their occurrence in the aquatic environment are needed. Graphical abstract

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