Assessing bioaccumulation potential of personal care, household and industrial products in a marine echinoderm (Holothuria tubulosa)

Sci Total Environ. 2020 Jun 10:720:137668. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137668. Epub 2020 Mar 3.

Abstract

A bioaccumulation study of 16 emerging contaminants including preservatives, UV-filters, biocides, alkylphenols, anionic surfactants and plasticizers, in Holothuria tubulosa Gmelin, 1791 specimens was developed. Water and sediments from their coastal habitat were also analyzed. Sediment-water distribution coefficients (log Kd) were in the range 0.78 to 2.95. A rapid uptake and bioaccumulation of pollutants was found. Compounds were detected in intestine and gonads of H. tubulosa after only eight days of exposure. Field-based bioconcentration (BCF) and biota-sediment accumulation factors (BSAF) were calculated. Log BCF > 1 were obtained for most of the compounds studied, indicating their tendency to accumulate in tissue of H. Tubulosa. BCF values decrease as follow: Triclocarban > anionic surfactants > benzophenone 3 > non-ionic surfactants > bisphenol A > parabens. These data provide a detailed accounting of the distribution patterns of some emerging contaminants in organisms at the lower trophic level, representing a potential source of contaminants for organisms in higher levels of the food chain.

Keywords: Bioaccumulation studies; Environmental partitioning; Holothuria tubulosa; Household and industrial chemicals; Marine pollution; Personal care products.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bioaccumulation
  • Biota
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Geologic Sediments
  • Holothuria*
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical

Substances

  • Water Pollutants, Chemical