Abstract
Farmlands represent a source of aged plastics and pesticides to the surrounding environments. It has been shown that chemicals can be sorbed and desorbed from plastics, but the interaction between plastic and mixtures of pesticides and their effects on freshwater biota has not been assessed yet. The aim of the work was to assess the potential role of agricultural plastics as vectors for a mixture of two herbicides and the impact of the herbicide mixture lixiviated from them towards the freshwater microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Pristine and aged polyethylene plastics collected from agricultural areas were exposed to the herbicides, bifenox, oxyfluorfen and their mixtures. The microalgae were exposed for 72 h to the leachates desorbed from plastics and the effect was quantified in terms of total chlorophyll content and several physiological parameters assessed by flow cytometry. Our results showed that changes in physicochemical properties (hydroxyl and carbonyl index, hydrophobicity, texture) in aged plastics increased their capacity to retain and to desorb the herbicides. Microalgae exposed to leachates containing bifenox, oxyfluorfen, or their mixture showed reactive oxygen species overproduction, lipid peroxidation, membrane potential hyperpolarization, intracellular pH acidification, and a loss of metabolic activity. The toxicological interactions of the leachate mixture were assessed using the Combination Index (CI)-isobologram method showing antagonism at low effect levels turning to synergism when the effect increased. In this work, we proved the hypothesis that ageing increases the capacity of agricultural plastics to behave as vector for toxic chemicals to the biota.
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