Chronic Exposure to Field-Realistic Concentrations of Carbamazepine Has Limited Detrimental Effects on Deleatidium Mayfly Nymphs

33 Pages Posted: 27 Dec 2024

See all articles by Niña Ponce Batucan

Niña Ponce Batucan

University of Otago

Louis A. Tremblay

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Grant Northcott

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Christoph Matthaei

University of Otago

Abstract

Pharmaceuticals are a class of emerging organic contaminants found in freshwaters. Potential chronic effects of many legacy drugs (those developed pre-2006) on freshwater biota were not investigated thoroughly before their market release. Carbamazepine is a legacy drug commonly detected in surface freshwaters worldwide, yet its potential impacts on invertebrates are largely unknown. Our study investigated the chronic effects (21 days exposure) of environmentally relevant concentrations of carbamazepine (0.12, 1.88, 3.36, 4.76, 6.46, 8.00 and 9.78 µg/L), using New Zealand native Deleatidium mayfly nymphs as model species in a static-renewal laboratory experiment. The experimental design included three controls: blank, solvent, and 1.4 µg/L imidacloprid (a neonicotinoid insecticide). The latter was used as a reference toxicant to characterise the toxicity response of Deleatidium. Endpoints measured to assess chronic effects were mayfly nymph survival, moulting propensity, emergence, impairment, immobility, feeding, and swimming. Carbamazepine weakly stimulated mayfly feeding activity, a possible adaptive response to mildly stressful conditions. No other adverse effects were detected. By contrast, toxicity from imidacloprid occurred as expected based on previous related research, with mayfly mortality, impairment and immobility all being significantly higher in imidacloprid treatments. Our findings suggest that carbamazepine may not be toxic to mayfly larvae at field-realistic concentrations applied for 21 days and based on the endpoints measured. However, due to the high specificity of pharmaceutical drugs to certain molecular targets, the mayfly Deleatidium might be less suitable for evaluating carbamazepine toxicity than some vertebrate models, thus further research on other pollution-sensitive model taxa is warranted.

Keywords: ecotoxicology, pharmaceuticals, Emerging contaminants, Stream invertebrates, freshwaters, Running Waters

Suggested Citation

Batucan, Niña Ponce and Tremblay, Louis A. and Northcott, Grant and Matthaei, Christoph, Chronic Exposure to Field-Realistic Concentrations of Carbamazepine Has Limited Detrimental Effects on Deleatidium Mayfly Nymphs. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5073714 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5073714

Niña Ponce Batucan (Contact Author)

University of Otago ( email )

P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, 9010
New Zealand

Louis A. Tremblay

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Grant Northcott

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Christoph Matthaei

University of Otago ( email )

P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, 9010
New Zealand

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