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Adverse effects in wild fish living downstream from pharmaceutical manufacture discharges
Institution:1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, NC, United States of America;2. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge, TN, United States of America;3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Mid-Continent Ecology Division, Duluth, MN, United States of America;4. U.S. Geological Survey, National Water Quality Laboratory, Denver, CO, United States of America;5. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, United States of America;6. U.S Geological Survey, Central Midwest Water Science Center, Iowa City, IA, United States of America;7. U.S Environmental Protection Agency, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, United States of America;8. APTIM, Cincinnati, OH, United States of America;1. IDEA-Instituto de Diversidad y Ecología Animal, CONICET and Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Av. Vélez Sarsfield 299, 5000 Córdoba, Argentina;2. ICYTAC- Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos Córdoba, CONICET and Facultad Ciencias Químicas, Dpto. Química Orgánica, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Ciudad Universitaria, 5016 Córdoba, Argentina;4. Water and Soil Quality Research Group, Department of Environmental Chemistry, IDAEA-CSIC, Jordi Girona 18-26, 08034 Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:A set of biochemical and histological responses was measured in wild gudgeon collected upstream and downstream of urban and pharmaceutical manufacture effluents. These individual end-points were associated to fish assemblage characterisation. Responses of biotransformation enzymes, neurotoxicity and endocrine disruption biomarkers revealed contamination of investigated stream by a mixture of pollutants. Fish from sampled sites downstream of the industrial effluent exhibited also strong signs of endocrine disruption including vitellogenin induction, intersex and male-biased sex-ratio. These individual effects were associated to a decrease of density and a lack of sensitive fish species. This evidence supports the hypothesis that pharmaceutical compounds discharged in stream are involved in recorded endocrine disruption effects and fish population disturbances and threaten disappearance of resident fish species. Overall, this study gives argument for the utilisation of an effect-based monitoring approach to assess impacts of pharmaceutical manufacture discharges on wild fish populations.
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