| Literature DB >> 29156601 |
Yang Du1,2, Wen-Qian Wang3,4, Zhou-Tao Pei5,6, Fahmi Ahmad7,8, Rou-Rou Xu9,10, Yi-Min Zhang11, Li-Wei Sun12,13.
Abstract
Ultraviolet (UV)-absorbing chemicals (UV filters) are used in personal care products for the protection of human skin and hair from damage by UV radiation. Although these substances are released into the environment in the production and consumption processes, little is known about their ecotoxicology effects. The acute toxicity and potential ecological risk of UV filters benzophenone-3 (BP-3) and benzophenone-4 (BP-4) on Chlorella vulgaris, Daphnia magna, and Brachydanio rerio were analyzed in the present study. The EC50 values (96 h) of BP-3 and BP-4 on C. vulgaris were 2.98 and 201.00 mg/L, respectively. The 48 h-LC50 of BP-3 and BP-4 on D. magna were 1.09 and 47.47 mg/L, respectively. The 96 h-LC50 of BP-3 and BP-4 on B. rerio were 3.89 and 633.00 mg/L, respectively. The toxicity of a mixture of BP-3 and BP-4 on C. vulgaris, D. magna, and B. rerio all showed antagonistic effects. The induced predicted no-effect concentrations of BP-3 and BP-4 by the assessment factor method were 1.80 × 10-3 and 0.47 mg/L, respectively, by assessment factor (AF) method, which were both lower than the concentrations detected in the environment at present, verifying that BP-3 and BP-4 remain low-risk chemicals to the aquatic ecosystem.Entities:
Keywords: UV filters; acute toxicity; benzophenone-3; benzophenone-4; ecological risk assessment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29156601 PMCID: PMC5708053 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14111414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Acute toxicity test classification criteria for algae.
| 96 h-EC50 (mg/L) | Toxicity Level |
|---|---|
| <1 | Very high-level |
| 1–10 | High-level |
| 10–100 | Medium-level |
| >100 | Low-level |
Acute toxicity test classification criteria for Daphnia.
| 48 h-LC50 (mg/L) | Toxicity Level |
|---|---|
| <1 | Very high-level |
| 1–10 | High-level |
| 10–100 | Medium-level |
| >100 | Low-level |
Acute toxicity test classification criteria for fish.
| 96 h-LC50 (mg/L) | Toxicity Level |
|---|---|
| <1 | Very high-level |
| 1–10 | High-level |
| 10–100 | Medium-level |
| >100 | Low-level |
Figure 1(a) The inhibition ratio of C. vulgaris growth of BP-3; (b) The lethal ratio of D. magna of BP-3; (c) The lethal ratio of B. rerio of BP-3.
Figure 2(a) The inhibition ratio of C. vulgaris growth of BP-4; (b) The lethal ratio of D. magna of BP-4; (c) The lethal ratio of B. rerio of BP-4.
Figure 3(a) The inhibition ratio of C. vulgaris growth of BP-3 and BP-4; (b) The lethal ratio of D. magna of BP-3 and BP-4; (c) The lethal ratio of B. rerio of BP-3 and BP-4.
Toxicity result of BP-3 (including the former data registered in AIST-MeRAM).
| Duration Type | Endpoint | Concentration mg/L | Exposure Duration (Days) | Species | Trophic Level | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | EC50 1 | 1.90 | 2 | Daphnids | Ministry of the Environment, Japan | |
| Acute | LC50 2 | 3.80 | 4 | Fish | Ministry of the Environment, Japan | |
| Acute | EC50 | 0.67 | 3 | Unicellular green algae ( | Algae | Ministry of the Environment, Japan |
| Chronic | NOEC 3 | 0.18 | 3 | Unicellular green algae ( | Algae | Ministry of the Environment, Japan |
| Acute | LC50 | 3.90 | 4 | Fish | This study | |
| Acute | EC50 | 2.98 | 4 | Algae | This study | |
| Acute | LC50 | 1.10 | 2 | Daphnids | This study | |
| Acute | EC50 | 1.67 | 2 | Daphnids | [ | |
| Chronic | NOEC | 0.50 | 21 | Daphnids | [ | |
| Acute | EC50 | 0.96 | 3 | Algae | [ | |
| Chronic | NOEC | 0.13 | 21 | Fish | [ |
1 Concentration for 50% of maximal effect; 2 Lethal Concentration for 50%; 3 No Observed Effect Concentration.
Toxicity result of BP-4 (including the former data registered in AIST-MeRAM).
| Duration Type | Endpoint | Concentration mg/L | Exposure Duration (Days) | Species | Trophic Level | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | LC50 | 633.00 | 4 | Fish | This study | |
| Acute | EC50 | 201.00 | 4 | Algae | This study | |
| Acute | LC50 | 47.46 | 2 | Daphnids | This study | |
| Acute | LC50 | 50.00 | 2 | Daphnids | K. Fent et al. |