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Occurrence of antibiotics in waters, removal by microalgae-based systems, and their toxicological effects: A review

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 813, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151891

Keywords

Antibiotics; Environmental distribution; Microalgae-based removal; Removal mechanism; Short-term toxicity; Long-term risk

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M670765]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [DUT21JC33]
  3. Open Foundation of Key Laboratory of Industrial Ecology and Environmental Engineering, MOE [KLIEEE-19-09]
  4. National Key R&D Program of China [SQ2020YFD090019-02]
  5. Major and Special Program on Science and Technology Projects in Dalian City [2020ZD23SN009]

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Global antibiotics consumption and release into the environment pose a threat to public health and ecosystems. Conventional treatment methods are moderately effective, while microalgae-based technology is a promising alternative. Previous studies focused on removal performances rather than mechanisms and toxicity. This study aims to connect antibiotics occurrence, microalgae-based removal, and toxicity to provide valuable information for related fields.
Global antibiotics consumption has been on the rise, leading to increased antibiotics release into the environment, which threatens public health by selecting for antibiotic resistant bacteria and resistance genes, and may endanger the entire ecosystem by impairing primary production. Conventional bacteria-based treatment methods are only moderately effective in antibiotics removal, while abiotic approaches such as advanced oxidation and adsorption are costly and energy/chemical intensive, and may cause secondary pollution. Considered as a promising alternative, wmicroalgae-based technology requires no extra chemical addition, and can realize tremendous CO2 mitigation accompanying growth related pollutants removal. Previous studies on microalgae-based antibiotics removal, however, focused more on the removal performances than on the removal mechanisms, and few studies have concerned the toxicity of antibiotics to microalgae during the treatment process. Yet understanding the removal mechanisms can be of great help for targeted microalgae-based antibiotics removal performances improvement. Moreover, most of the removal and toxicity studies were carried out using environment-irrelevant high concentrations of antibiotics, leading to reduced guidance for real-world situations. Integrating the two research fields can be helpful for both improving antibiotics removal and avoiding toxicological effects to primary producers by the residual pollutants. This study, therefore, aims to build a link connecting the occurrence of antibiotics in the aquatic environment, the removal of antibiotics by microalgae-based processes, and the toxicity of antibiotics to microalgae. Distribution of various categories of antibiotics in different water environments were summarized, together with the antibiotics removal mechanisms and performances in microalgae-based systems, and the toxicological mechanisms and toxicity of antibiotics to microalgae after either short-term or long-term exposure. Current research gaps and future prospects were also analyzed. The review could provide much valuable information to the related fields, and provoke interesting thoughts on integrating microalgae-based antibiotics removal research and toxicity research on the basis of environmentally relevant concentrations. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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