April 30, 2024
Ali Mohammad Sanati

Ali Mohammad Sanati

Academic Rank: Assistant professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Environmental - Pollution
Phone: 07731222231
Faculty: Persian Gulf Research Institue

Research

Title Occurrence and Distribution of Antibiotics in the Water,Sediment, and Biota of Freshwater and Marine Environments; A Review
Type Article
Keywords
emerging concern; antibiotics; marine environments; sediments; biota
Journal JOURNAL OF ANTIBIOTICS
DOI 10.3390/antibiotics11111461
Researchers Zeinab Maghsodian (First researcher) , Ali Mohammad Sanati (Second researcher) , Tebego Mashifana (Third researcher) , Mika Silanpaa (Fourth researcher) , Shengyu Feng (Fifth researcher) , Tan Nhat (Not in first six researchers) , Bahman Ramavandi (Not in first six researchers)

Abstract

Antibiotics, as pollutants of emerging concern, can enter marine environments, rivers, and lakes and endanger ecology and human health. The purpose of this study was to review the studies conducted on the presence of antibiotics in water, sediments, and organisms in aquatic environments (i.e., seas, rivers, and lakes). Most of the reviewed studies were conducted in 2018 (15%) and 2014 (11%). Antibiotics were reported in aqueous media at a concentration of <1 ng/L– 100 μg/L. The results showed that the highest number of works were conducted in the Asian continent (seas: 74%, rivers: 78%, lakes: 87%, living organisms: 100%). The highest concentration of antibiotics in water and sea sediments, with a frequency of 49%, was related to fluoroquinolones. According to the results, the highest amounts of antibiotics in water and sediment were reported as 460 ng/L and 406 ng/g, respectively. In rivers, sulfonamides had the highest abundance (30%). Fluoroquinolones (with an abundance of 34%) had the highest concentration in lakes. Moreover, the highest concentration of fluoroquinolones in living organisms was reported at 68,000 ng/g, with a frequency of 39%. According to the obtained results, it can be concluded that sulfonamides and fluoroquinolones are among the most dangerous antibiotics due to their high concentrations in the environment. This review provides timely information regarding the presence of antibiotics in different aquatic environments, which can be helpful for estimating ecological risks, contamination levels, and their management.