4.7 Article

A burning issue: The effect of organic ultraviolet filter exposure on the behaviour and physiology of Daphnia magna

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 750, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141707

Keywords

Avobenzone; Octocrylene; Oxybenzone; Emerging contaminant

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [04153]
  2. University of Alberta
  3. Helmholtz-Alberta Initiative (HAI) through the Alberta Environment and Parks' ecoTrust Program
  4. Canada First Research Excellence Fund

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The study simulated the effects of UV filters on Daphnia in freshwater ecosystems, finding that immobilization mainly occurred in octocrylene at environmentally realistic concentrations, while avobenzone and oxybenzone caused behavioral and physiological disruptions.
Ultraviolet (UV) filters are compounds utilized in many manufacturing processes and personal care products such as sunscreen to protect against UV-radiation. These highly lipophilic compounds are emerging contaminants of concern in aquatic environments due to their previously observed potential to bioaccumulate and exert toxic effects in marine ecosystems. Currently, research into the toxic effects of UV filter contamination of freshwater ecosystems is lacking, thus the present study sought to model the effects of acute and chronic developmental exposures to UV filters avobenzone, oxybenzone and octocrylene as well as a mixture of these substances in the freshwater invertebrate, Daphnia magna, at environmentally realistic concentrations. Median 48-hour effect and lethal concentrations were determined to be in the low mg/L range, with the exception of octocrylene causing 50% immobilization near environmental concentrations. 48-hour acute developmental exposures proved to behaviourally impair daphnid phototactic response; however, recovery was observed following a 19-day post-exposure period. Although no physiological disruptions were detected in acutely exposed daphnids, delayed mortality was observed up to seven days post-exposure at 200 mu g/L of avobenzone and octocrylene. 21-day chronic exposure to 7.5 mu g/L octocrylene yielded complete mortality within 7 days, while sublethal chronic exposure to avobenzone increased Daphnia reproductive output and decreased metabolic rate. 2 mu g/L oxybenzone induced a 25% increase in metabolic rate of adult daphnids, and otherwise caused no toxic effects at this dose. These data indicate that UV filters can exert toxic effects in freshwater invertebrates, therefore further study is required. It is clear that the most well-studied UV filter, oxybenzone, may not be the most toxic to Daphnia, as both avobenzone and octocrylene induced behavioural and physiological disruption at environmentally realistic concentrations. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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