| Literature DB >> 30458376 |
Tangtian He1, Mirabelle Mei Po Tsui2, Chih Jui Tan3, Chui Ying Ma2, Sam King Fung Yiu2, Li Hsueh Wang3, Te Hao Chen3, Tung Yung Fan3, Paul Kwan Sing Lam2, Margaret Burkhardt Murphy2.
Abstract
Corals are exposed to organic ultraviolet (UV) filters and other personal care product (PCP) ingredients in the environment, but the toxicities of organic UV filters and their related PCP to corals are not well understood. In this study, 7-day exposures were conducted to evaluate the toxicities and bioaccumulation of two organic UV filters, ethylhexylmethoxy-cinnamate (EHMC; octinoxate) and octocrylene (OC) (single- and combined-chemical tests), and diluted sunscreen wash-off water containing both active ingredients to the adult life stage of two hard coral species, Seriatopora caliendrum and Pocillopora damicornis. In the single-chemical tests, death (33.3%) and bleaching (83.3%) were only observed in the 1000 μg/L EHMC treatment of S. caliendrum. In the sunscreen product exposures, 5% sunscreen water (containing 422.34 ± 37.34 μg/L of EHMC and 33.50 ± 7.60 μg/L of OC at Day 0) caused high mortality in S. caliendrum (66.7-83.3%) and P. damicornis (33.3-50%), and tissue concentrations were up to 10 times greater than in the single-chemical exposures; co-exposure to EHMC and OC at similar levels to those in the sunscreen product resulted in bioaccumulation similar to the single-chemical tests. These results confirm the bioaccumulation potential of EHMC and OC and show that other ingredients in sunscreen products may increase the bioavailability of active ingredients to corals and exacerbate the toxicity of sunscreen products. Future studies on the toxicities of PCPs to aquatic organisms should not only focus on the toxicities of active ingredients.Entities:
Keywords: Bioavailability; Organic ultraviolet filter; Personal care product; Risk assessment; Scleractinia
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30458376 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.11.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071