4.7 Article

Effects of aquaculture waste feeds and antibiotics on marine benthic ecosystems in the Mediterranean Sea

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 806, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151190

Keywords

Aquaculture; Organic waste; Antibiotics; Environmental risk assessment; Marine pollution

Funding

  1. H2020-TAPAS project (Tools for Assessment and Planning of Aquaculture Sustainability) [678396]
  2. United Nations Access and Benefit-sharing Clearing-house tool for the imple-mentation of the Nagoya Protocol [ABSCH-IRCC-ES-239047-1]
  3. Talented Researcher Support Programme-Plan GenT of the Generalitat Valenciana [CIDEGENT/2020/043]
  4. EHU/UPV postdoctoral fellowship (2020-2022)

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Intensive aquaculture generates organic waste and antibiotics that impact the benthic ecosystems in the Mediterranean Sea. The study reveals that these substances alter sediment properties, accumulate in wild fauna, affect microbial communities, and contribute to antibiotic resistance genes. This research highlights the rapid alteration of habitat and biodiversity in Mediterranean benthic ecosystems due to aquaculture waste and antibiotic residues.
Intensive aquaculture is an important source of organic waste and antibiotics into the marine environment. Yet, their impacts on benthic marine ecosystems are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the ecological impacts of fish feed waste alone and in combination with three different antibiotics (i.e., oxytetracycline, florfenicol and flumequine) in benthic ecosystems of the Mediterranean Sea by performing a field experiment. We assessed the fate of the antibiotics in the sediment and their accumulation in wild fauna after two weeks of exposure. Moreover, we investigated the impact of the feed waste alone and in combination with the antibiotics on sediment physico-chemical properties, on benthic invertebrates, as well as on the microbiota and resistome of the sampled sediments. One week after the last antibiotic application, average oxytetracycline and flumequine concentrations in the sediment were <1% and 15% of the applied dose, respectively, while florfenicol was not detected. Flumequine concentrations in wild invertebrates reached 3 mu g g(-1), while concentrations of oxytetracycline were about an order of magnitude lower, and florfenicol was not detected. Feed waste, with and without antibiotics, increased the concentration of fine particulate matter, affected the pH and redox conditions, and significantly reduced the biodiversity and abundance of benthic invertebrates. Feed waste also had a significant influence on the structure of sediment microbial communities, while specific effects related to the different antibiotics ranged from insignificant to mild. The presence of antibiotics significantly influenced the normalized abundance of the measured antibiotic resistance genes. Florfenicol and oxytetracycline contributed to an increase of genes conferring resistance to macrolides, tetracyclines, aminoglycosides and chloramphenicol, while flumequine had a less clear impact on the sediment resistome. This study demonstrates that feed waste from aquaculture farms can rapidly alter the habitat and biodiversity of Mediterranean benthic ecosystems, while an-tibiotic residual concentrations can contribute to the enrichment of bacterial genes resistant to antibiotic classes that are of high relevance for human medicine. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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