Modelling the bioconcentration of Zn from commercial sunscreens in the marine bivalve Ruditapes philippinarum
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Rodríguez Romero, Araceli; Ruiz Gutiérrez, Gema


Fecha
2022-11Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
Chemosphere, 2022, 307(3), 136043
9th Iberoamerican Congress on Contamination and Environmental Toxicology (CICTA), Blumenau, Brazil, 2021
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Bioconcentration model
Kinetic
Sunscreen
Metal release
Zinc
Clam
Resumen/Abstract
Sunscreens contain ZnO particles used as a UV filter cause adverse effects in the marine environment through the release of this metal into seawater and its bioaccumulation in organisms. A mathematical model using sunscreen colloidal residues, seawater and R. philippinarum clams as differentiated compartments, is proposed in order to interpret both the kinetic pattern and the bioaccumulation of Zn in clams. Two kinetic laboratory experiments were conducted, both with and without clams exposed to sunscreen concentrations from 0 to 200 mg L−1. Both the lowest value of uptake rate coefficient obtained when 5 mg L−1 of sunscreen is added (0.00688 L g−1 d−1) and the highest obtained at sunscreen addition of 100 mg L−1 (0.0670 L g−1 d−1), predict a lower bioavailability of Zn in a complex medium such as the seawater-sunscreen mixtures, in comparison to those studied in the literature. The efflux rate coefficient from clams to seawater increased from 0 to 0.162 d−1 with the sunscreen concentrations. The estimated value of the inlet rate coefficient at all studied concentrations indicates that there is a negligible colloidal Zn uptake rate by clams, probably due to the great stability of the organic colloidal residue. An equilibrium shift to higher values of Zn in water is predicted due to the bioconcentration of Zn in clams. The kinetic model proposed with no constant Zn (aq) concentrations may contribute to a more realistic prediction of the bioaccumulation of Zn from sunscreens in clams.
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