4.7 Article

Co-Exposure of Nanopolystyrene and Other Environmental Contaminants-Their Toxic Effects on the Survival and Reproduction of Enchytraeus crypticus

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics10040193

Keywords

pharmaceuticals; ecotoxicity; metal-based; plastics; nanomaterials; soil fauna; invertebrates

Funding

  1. FCT/MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC)
  2. FEDER, within the PT2020 Partnership Agreement
  3. CESAM [UIDB/50017/2020 + UIDP/50017/2020 + LA/P/0094/2020]
  4. H2020 through the LABPLAS project [101003954]
  5. FCT [CEECIND/01275/2018]
  6. national funds (OE), through FCT
  7. Compete 2020 via UNRAvEL project [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-029035]

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Plastics pollution, in combination with other contaminants, can have harmful effects on soil ecosystems, including decreased reproduction and survival of organisms.
Plastics in all shapes and sizes have become widespread across ecosystems due to intense anthropogenic use. As such, they can interact with other contaminants that accumulate in the terrestrial environment, such as pharmaceuticals, metals or nanomaterials (NMs). These interactions can potentiate combined toxic effects in the exposed soil organisms, with hazardous long-term consequences to the full ecosystem. In the present study, a terrestrial model species, Enchytraeus crypticus (oligochaeta), was exposed through contaminated soil with nanopolystyrene (representative of nanoplastics (NPls)), alone and in combination with diphenhydramine (DPH, representative of pharmaceuticals), silver nitrate (AgNO3, representative of metals) and vanadium nanoparticles (VNPs, representative of NMs). AgNO3 and VNPs decreased E. crypticus reproduction at 50 mg/kg, regardless of the presence of NPls. Moreover, at the same concentration, both single and combined VNP exposures decreased the E. crypticus survival. On the other hand, DPH and NPls individually caused no effect on organisms' survival and reproduction. However, the combination of DPH (10 and 50 mg/kg) with 300 mg NPls/kg induced a decrease in reproduction, showing a relevant interaction between the two contaminants (synergism). Our findings indicate that the NPls can play a role as vectors for other contaminants and can potentiate the effects of pharmaceuticals, such as DPH, even at low and sub-lethal concentrations, highlighting the negative impact of mixtures of contaminants (including NPls) on soil systems.

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