Abstract

Pharmaceuticals and personal care products, antibiotics, estrogens, and antiandrogens are found widely in aquatic environments. Monitoring studies by sampling surface water and effluents of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) have been conducted recently to monitor antiandrogens, which, along with estrogens, cause endocrine disruption. However, few studies have investigated antiandrogenic activity (AA) combined with a chemical analyses of emerging antiandrogens. Therefore, we analyzed the presence and persistence of 12 types of antiandrogens, atrazine, and carbamazepine using grab sampling and polar organic chemical integrative sampler (POCIS) along a river affected by WWTP discharges. Water and sediment samples were collected from the WWTP effluent (WW), as well as upstream (US) and downstream (DS) of the WWTP. We detected only tebuconazole, triclosan, propiconazole, and fluconazole during the two sampling campaigns in 2016 and 2017. Grab sampling of the site WW detected tebuconazole (7–77 ng/L), propiconazole (5–47 ng/L), and fluconazole (6–45 ng/L). However, the concentrations in the river water were below the detection limits. Nevertheless, fluconazole and triclosan were detected by POCIS in the site WW (45.7 and 26.8 ng/L, respectively) and all river samples ranges of 0.3–9.3 and 2.4–3.7, respectively. This detection was attributed to the limit of quantification of POCIS being lower than that of grab sampling. Nilutamide and triclosan were detected in the river sediment, suggesting that their concentrations in the water column were at least partly attenuated through sediment sorption. We also observed AA by analyzing POCIS extracts with the yeast androgen screen assay. The highest AA was found in the site WW and it was still observable several kilometers downstream of the point of discharge despite decreasing. Therefore, the WWTP effluent was most likely contributor to the persistent AA in the river.

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