Abstract

A variety of antibiotics are ubiquitous in all freshwater ecosystems that receive wastewater. A wide variety of antibiotics have been developed to kill problematic bacteria and fungi through targeted application, and their use has contributed significantly to public health and livestock management. Unfortunately, a substantial fraction of the antibiotics applied to humans, pets and livestock end up in wastewater, and ultimately many of these chemicals enter freshwater ecosystems. The effect of adding chemicals that are intentionally designed to kill microbes, on freshwater microbial communities remains poorly understood. There are reasons to be concerned, as microbes play an essential role in nutrient uptake, carbon fixation and denitrification in freshwater ecosystems. Chemicals that reduce or alter freshwater microbial communities might reduce their capacity to degrade the excess nutrients and organic matter that characterize wastewater. We performed a laboratory experiment in which we exposed microbial community from unexposed stream sediments to three commonly detected antibiotics found in urban wastewater and urban streams (sulfamethoxazole, danofloxacin, and erythromycin). We assessed how the form and concentration of inorganic nitrogen, microbial carbon, and nitrogen cycling processes changed in response to environmentally relevant doses (10 μg/L) of each of these antibiotics individually and in combination. We expected to find that all antibiotics suppressed rates of microbial mineralization and nitrogen transformations and we anticipated that this suppression of microbial activity would be greatest in the combined treatment. Contrary to our expectations we measured few significant changes in microbially mediated functions in response to our experimental antibiotic dosing. We found no difference in functional gene abundance of key nitrogen cycling genes nosZ, mcrA, nirK, and amoA genes, and we measured no treatment effects on NO3- uptake or N2O, N2, CH4, CO2 production over the course of our seven-day experiment. In the mixture treatment, we measured significant increases in NH4+ concentrations over the first 24 hours of the experiment, which were indistinguishable from controls within six hours. Our results suggest remarkable community resistance to pressure antibiotic exposure poses on naïve stream sediments.

Highlights

  • Pharmaceuticals are classified as “new emerging pollutants”, due to their detection in almost all environmental matrices at increasing concentrations and no regulations regarding their release into the environment [1,2,3]

  • Organisms in urban streams are exposed to a suite of chemicals via wastewater and receive among the highest diversity of pharmaceuticals, which may be sourced from septic fields, leaky sewage infrastructure, combined sewer overflows, wastewater treatment plant effluent, and pet waste [4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • Antibiotics may compound the effects of excess nutrient loading and more frequent scouring flows that are known to reduce the capacity for urban stream ecosystems to support biodiversity and to sequester or transform excess nutrients [5, 11, 12]

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Summary

Introduction

Pharmaceuticals are classified as “new emerging pollutants”, due to their detection in almost all environmental matrices at increasing concentrations and no regulations regarding their release into the environment [1,2,3]. Of the various types of pharmaceuticals antibiotics are the most frequently used and detected in aquatic environments [2, 10]. Antibiotics may compound the effects of excess nutrient loading and more frequent scouring flows that are known to reduce the capacity for urban stream ecosystems to support biodiversity and to sequester or transform excess nutrients [5, 11, 12]. Microbes are principally responsible for the transformation and assimilation of excess nitrogen (N) in urban streams (e.g., denitrification, nitrogen fixation, and organic matter decomposition) [14,15,16]. There has been little experimental work examining the effects of pharmaceuticals on N cycling, but it has been shown that the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole can inhibit denitrification [24, 25]

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