4.7 Article

Inhomogeneous antibiotic distribution in sediment profiles in anthropogenically impacted lakes: Source apportionment, fate drivers, and risk assessment

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 341, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118048

Keywords

Antibiotic; Environmental fate; Sediment profile; Source apportionment; Risk assessment

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Antibiotic residues in lake sediments from four agricultural lakes in central China were investigated. The study revealed the vertical distribution pattern and sources of antibiotics in the sediments. The highest concentrations were found in the middle-layer sediments, and the presence of certain elements and organic matter also affected the distribution of antibiotics. The study emphasized the importance of prevention and control of antibiotic contamination in lakes.
Antibiotic residues in lake ecosystems have been widely reported; however, the vertical distribution of antibiotics in lake sediment profiles have rarely been examined. This study systematically revealed the vertical distribution pattern, sources, and risks of antibiotics in sediments of four typical agricultural lakes in central China. Nine of 33 target antibiotics were detected with a total concentration range of 39.3-18,250.6 ng/g (dry weight), and the order of average concentration was erythromycin (1447.4 ng/g) > sulfamethoxazole (443.7 ng/g) > oxytetra-cycline (62.6 ng/g) > enrofloxacin (40.7 ng/g) > others (0.1-2.1 ng/g). The middle-layer sediments (9-27 cm) had significantly higher antibiotic detected number and concentration than those in the top layer (0-9 cm) and bottom layer (27-45 cm) (p < 0.05). Correlation analysis showed that significant relationships existed between antibiotic concentrations and the octanol-water partition coefficients (Kow) of antibiotics (p < 0.05). Redundancy analysis indicated that Pb, Co, Ni, water content, and organic matter (p < 0.05) jointly affected the distribution of antibiotics in sediment profiles. Risk assessment showed that the highest potential ecological and resistance selection risks of antibiotics occurred in the middle-layer sediments, and oxytetracycline, tetracycline, and enrofloxacin had the most extensive potential risks in the sediment profiles. Additionally, the positive matrix factorization model revealed that human medical wastewater (54.5%) contributed more antibiotic pollution than animal excreta (45.5%) in sediment. This work highlights the inhomogeneous distribution of antibiotics in sediment profiles and provides valuable information for the prevention and control of antibiotic contamination in lakes.

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