Franz Marius Schmitt, Karel Viaene, Koen Oorts, Charlotte Nys, Marnix Vangheluwe, Karel de Schamphelaere
{"title":"优先考虑欧洲淡水中金属与有机微污染物的二元混合物:谁造成了风险?","authors":"Franz Marius Schmitt, Karel Viaene, Koen Oorts, Charlotte Nys, Marnix Vangheluwe, Karel de Schamphelaere","doi":"10.1093/etojnl/vgaf118","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The toxicity of metal-organic mixtures and their environmental occurrence is currently poorly understood. This study aimed to identify and prioritize organic substances that potentially pose an aquatic mixture risk with metals. To guide and facilitate future experimental research, the focus was on binary mixture combinations alone. Monitoring data of European freshwaters was used to assess 12,180 possible binary mixture combinations of 609 unique organic substances and 20 metals. To evaluate the risk of metal-organic mixtures on an ecosystem level, a generic risk quotient approach using predicted no-effect concentrations or equivalent values was performed. The approach identified 105 binary priority combinations with 55 priority organic substances and 12 priority metals. For all priority combinations, more than 10% of measured samples exceeded the defined risk threshold of 1. To understand the risk of the 55 priority organic substances to specific target species, a toxic unit approach was performed using chronic toxicity data for Daphnia magna, Raphidocellis subcapitata, and fish species. To D. magna and fish, 14 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk, all substances with various modes of action (MoA). To D. magna, the insecticide methomyl, an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor, was of highest priority. For fish, the fatty acid inhibitor triclosan was of highest priority. To R. subcapitata, 13 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk in binary pairs with metals. These 13 substances were mainly herbicides, dominated by photosynthesis-inhibiting and fatty acid synthesis-inhibiting MoA. The prioritized binary mixtures are intended to assist the design of future laboratory studies of metal organic micropollutant mixtures across a range of MoA.</p>","PeriodicalId":11793,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry","volume":" ","pages":"2347-2360"},"PeriodicalIF":2.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Prioritizing binary mixtures of metals with organic micropollutants in European freshwater: who drives the risk?\",\"authors\":\"Franz Marius Schmitt, Karel Viaene, Koen Oorts, Charlotte Nys, Marnix Vangheluwe, Karel de Schamphelaere\",\"doi\":\"10.1093/etojnl/vgaf118\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The toxicity of metal-organic mixtures and their environmental occurrence is currently poorly understood. This study aimed to identify and prioritize organic substances that potentially pose an aquatic mixture risk with metals. To guide and facilitate future experimental research, the focus was on binary mixture combinations alone. Monitoring data of European freshwaters was used to assess 12,180 possible binary mixture combinations of 609 unique organic substances and 20 metals. To evaluate the risk of metal-organic mixtures on an ecosystem level, a generic risk quotient approach using predicted no-effect concentrations or equivalent values was performed. The approach identified 105 binary priority combinations with 55 priority organic substances and 12 priority metals. For all priority combinations, more than 10% of measured samples exceeded the defined risk threshold of 1. To understand the risk of the 55 priority organic substances to specific target species, a toxic unit approach was performed using chronic toxicity data for Daphnia magna, Raphidocellis subcapitata, and fish species. To D. magna and fish, 14 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk, all substances with various modes of action (MoA). To D. magna, the insecticide methomyl, an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor, was of highest priority. For fish, the fatty acid inhibitor triclosan was of highest priority. To R. subcapitata, 13 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk in binary pairs with metals. These 13 substances were mainly herbicides, dominated by photosynthesis-inhibiting and fatty acid synthesis-inhibiting MoA. 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Prioritizing binary mixtures of metals with organic micropollutants in European freshwater: who drives the risk?
The toxicity of metal-organic mixtures and their environmental occurrence is currently poorly understood. This study aimed to identify and prioritize organic substances that potentially pose an aquatic mixture risk with metals. To guide and facilitate future experimental research, the focus was on binary mixture combinations alone. Monitoring data of European freshwaters was used to assess 12,180 possible binary mixture combinations of 609 unique organic substances and 20 metals. To evaluate the risk of metal-organic mixtures on an ecosystem level, a generic risk quotient approach using predicted no-effect concentrations or equivalent values was performed. The approach identified 105 binary priority combinations with 55 priority organic substances and 12 priority metals. For all priority combinations, more than 10% of measured samples exceeded the defined risk threshold of 1. To understand the risk of the 55 priority organic substances to specific target species, a toxic unit approach was performed using chronic toxicity data for Daphnia magna, Raphidocellis subcapitata, and fish species. To D. magna and fish, 14 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk, all substances with various modes of action (MoA). To D. magna, the insecticide methomyl, an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor, was of highest priority. For fish, the fatty acid inhibitor triclosan was of highest priority. To R. subcapitata, 13 out of the 55 priority substances posed a risk in binary pairs with metals. These 13 substances were mainly herbicides, dominated by photosynthesis-inhibiting and fatty acid synthesis-inhibiting MoA. The prioritized binary mixtures are intended to assist the design of future laboratory studies of metal organic micropollutant mixtures across a range of MoA.
期刊介绍:
The Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) publishes two journals: Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (ET&C) and Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (IEAM). Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry is dedicated to furthering scientific knowledge and disseminating information on environmental toxicology and chemistry, including the application of these sciences to risk assessment.[...]
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry is interdisciplinary in scope and integrates the fields of environmental toxicology; environmental, analytical, and molecular chemistry; ecology; physiology; biochemistry; microbiology; genetics; genomics; environmental engineering; chemical, environmental, and biological modeling; epidemiology; and earth sciences. ET&C seeks to publish papers describing original experimental or theoretical work that significantly advances understanding in the area of environmental toxicology, environmental chemistry and hazard/risk assessment. Emphasis is given to papers that enhance capabilities for the prediction, measurement, and assessment of the fate and effects of chemicals in the environment, rather than simply providing additional data. The scientific impact of papers is judged in terms of the breadth and depth of the findings and the expected influence on existing or future scientific practice. Methodological papers must make clear not only how the work differs from existing practice, but the significance of these differences to the field. Site-based research or monitoring must have regional or global implications beyond the particular site, such as evaluating processes, mechanisms, or theory under a natural environmental setting.