Login / Signup

Contrasting toxicity response to a mixture of azithromycin and ivermectin between a freshwater and a euryhaline rotifer.

Uriel Arreguin-RebolledoLevi Asher Morales-RomeroMario Alberto Arzate-CárdenasFederico Páez-OsunaMiguel Betancourt-LozanoRoberto Rico-Martínez
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2024)
Organisms are usually exposed to mixtures of emerging pollutants in aquatic environments. Due to their widespread use and environmental relevance, the individual and combined effects of the drugs azithromycin (AZT) and ivermectin (IVM) on the freshwater rotifer Lecane papuana and the euryhaline rotifer Proales similis were investigated. Rotifers showed greater sensitivity to IVM compared to AZT. The LC 50 values of IVM and AZT for L. papuana and P. similis were 0.163 and 0.172 mg/L, and 13.52 and 20.00 mg/L, respectively. Population growth rates, assessed in chronic toxicity assays, responded negatively to increasing concentrations of both toxicants, either individually or in combination. Our results revealed two distinct combined toxicity responses: a strong synergistic effect in the freshwater rotifer and a marked antagonistic impact of the AZT-IVM mixtures in the euryhaline rotifer.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • ionic liquid
  • risk assessment
  • high throughput
  • heavy metals
  • drug induced
  • atomic force microscopy
  • gram negative
  • climate change