Abstract

BackgroundPesticide residue contamination of surface water in agricultural areas can have adverse effects on the ecosystem. We have performed an integrated chemical and bioanalytical profiling of surface water samples from Swedish agricultural areas, aiming to assess toxic activity due to presence of pesticides. A total of 157 water samples were collected from six geographical sites with extensive agricultural activity. The samples were chemically analyzed for 129 commonly used pesticides and transformation products. Furthermore, the toxicity was investigated using in vitro bioassays in the water samples following liquid–liquid extraction. Endpoints included oxidative stress response (Nrf2 activity), estrogen receptor (ER) activity, and aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) activity. The bioassays were performed with a final enrichment factor of 5 for the water samples. All bioassays were conducted at non-cytotoxic conditions.ResultsA total of 51 pesticides and transformation products were detected in the water samples. Most of the compounds were herbicides, followed by fungicides, insecticides and transformation products. The highest total pesticide concentration in an individual sample was 39 µg/L, and the highest median total concentration at a sample site was 1.1 µg/L. The largest number of pesticides was 31 in a single sample. We found that 3% of the water samples induced oxidative stress response, 23% of the samples activated the estrogen receptor, and 77% of the samples activated the aryl hydrocarbon receptor. Using Spearman correlation coefficients, a statistically significant correlation was observed between AhR and ER activities, and AhR activity was strongly correlated with oxidative stress in samples with a high AhR activity. Statistically significant relationships were observed between bioactivities and individual pesticides, although the relationships are probably not causal, due to the low concentrations of pesticides. Co-occurrence of non-identified chemical pollutants and naturally occurring toxic compounds may be responsible for the induced bioactivities.ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that integrated chemical analysis and bioanalysis can be performed in water samples following liquid/liquid extraction with a final enrichment factor of 5. AhR and ER activities were induced in water samples from agricultural areas. The activities were presumably not caused by the occurrence of pesticides, but induced by other anthropogenic and natural chemicals.

Highlights

  • Pesticide residue contamination of surface water in agricultural areas can have adverse effects on the ecosystem

  • Pesticide data set Recovery of pesticides analyzed by LC–MS/MS was determined after extraction by dichloromethane to estimate the concentration present of these pesticides in the bioassays (Additional file 3: Table S3)

  • Three pesticides had a recovery of 15–63% and the concentrations were adjusted according to the recovery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Pesticide residue contamination of surface water in agricultural areas can have adverse effects on the ecosystem. We have performed an integrated chemical and bioanalytical profiling of surface water samples from Swedish agricultural areas, aiming to assess toxic activity due to presence of pesticides. Surface water in agricultural areas can be contaminated by pesticide residues [1] with possible adverse effects on the ecosystem [2,3,4]. Environmental monitoring of pesticide residues in water is generally based on chemical analysis of pesticides and known metabolites or degradation products thereof. It is not possible to detect unknown substances (e.g, unknown pesticide metabolites or degradation products), it does not assess effects of individual chemicals or mixture effects, and there is often not a clear link to adverse outcome. Könemann et al [14] identified effectbased screening methods as sensitive and valuable complements to chemical analysis for monitoring estrogens under the European Water Framework Directive

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call