Effects Thresholds and Predicted No Effect Concentrations of Ten Common Pharmaceuticals for Protecting Saltwater Organisms
ID:157 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2025-11-08 11:41:25 Hits:102 Poster Presentation

Start Time:Pending(Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:Pending

Session:No Session »

Presentation File

Tips: Only the registered participant can access the file. Please sign in first.

Abstract
Pharmaceuticals have garnered considerable attention due to their extensive presence in the environment. However, studies regarding their impact on the marine ecosystem remain limited, and toxicity data for many pharmaceuticals toward marine species are still severely lacking. This study systematically investigated the toxicity and ecological risks of ten pharmaceuticals on nine marine species spanning three trophic levels, including four species of marine microalgae, four invertebrates, and one fish species. The effect/lethal concentrations 50% (EC50/LC50) revealed that microalgae exhibited the highest sensitivity, whereas vertebrate marine medaka (Oryzias melastigma) embryos showed the greatest tolerance. Species sensitivity distribution (SSD) models were constructed based on acute toxicity endpoints, and predicted no-effect concentrations (PNECs) for the target pharmaceuticals were derived, ranging from 0.003 to 59 mg/L. Amitriptyline (AMT) demonstrated the lowest PNEC, indicating the highest potential ecotoxicity among the ten pharmaceuticals. The microalga Isochrysis galbana, which showed the highest sensitivity to AMT, was selected for exposure experiments at environmentally relevant concentration gradients to investigate the underlying mechanisms of toxicity. The result demonstrated that AMT inhibits ribosomal biogenesis and translation-related signaling pathways, while also triggering oxidative stress, leading to cellular damage and ultimately suppressing microalgal growth. This study provides critical benchmarks for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals in marine environments.Pharmaceuticals have garnered considerable attention due to their extensive presence in the environment. However, studies regarding their impact on the marine ecosystem remain limited, and toxicity data for many pharmaceuticals toward marine species are still severely lacking. This study systematically investigated the toxicity and ecological risks of ten pharmaceuticals on nine marine species spanning three trophic levels, including four species of marine microalgae, four invertebrates, and one fish species. The effect/lethal concentrations 50% (EC50/LC50) revealed that microalgae exhibited the highest sensitivity, whereas vertebrate marine medaka (Oryzias melastigma) embryos showed the greatest tolerance. Species sensitivity distribution (SSD) models were constructed based on acute toxicity endpoints, and predicted no-effect concentrations (PNECs) for the target pharmaceuticals were derived, ranging from 0.003 to 59 mg/L. Amitriptyline (AMT) demonstrated the lowest PNEC, indicating the highest potential ecotoxicity among the ten pharmaceuticals. The microalga Isochrysis galbana, which showed the highest sensitivity to AMT, was selected for exposure experiments at environmentally relevant concentration gradients to investigate the underlying mechanisms of toxicity. The result demonstrated that AMT inhibits ribosomal biogenesis and translation-related signaling pathways, while also triggering oxidative stress, leading to cellular damage and ultimately suppressing microalgal growth. This study provides critical benchmarks for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals in marine environments.Pharmaceuticals have garnered considerable attention due to their extensive presence in the environment. However, studies regarding their impact on the marine ecosystem remain limited, and toxicity data for many pharmaceuticals toward marine species are still severely lacking. This study systematically investigated the toxicity and ecological risks of ten pharmaceuticals on nine marine species spanning three trophic levels, including four species of marine microalgae, four invertebrates, and one fish species. The effect/lethal concentrations 50% (EC50/LC50) revealed that microalgae exhibited the highest sensitivity, whereas vertebrate marine medaka (Oryzias melastigma) embryos showed the greatest tolerance. Species sensitivity distribution (SSD) models were constructed based on acute toxicity endpoints, and predicted no-effect concentrations (PNECs) for the target pharmaceuticals were derived, ranging from 0.003 to 59 mg/L. Amitriptyline (AMT) demonstrated the lowest PNEC, indicating the highest potential ecotoxicity among the ten pharmaceuticals. The microalga Isochrysis galbana, which showed the highest sensitivity to AMT, was selected for exposure experiments at environmentally relevant concentration gradients to investigate the underlying mechanisms of toxicity. The result demonstrated that AMT inhibits ribosomal biogenesis and translation-related signaling pathways, while also triggering oxidative stress, leading to cellular damage and ultimately suppressing microalgal growth. This study provides critical benchmarks for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals in marine environments.
Keywords
Marine environmental benchmarks; Antibiotics; Artificial sweetener; Acute toxicity test; Transcriptomic analysis
Speaker
Ruolan JIA
PhD STUDENT City University of Hong Kong

Submission Author
Ruolan JIA City University of Hong Kong
Submit Comment
Verify Code Change Another
All Comments
Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Nov 20

    2025

    to

    Nov 24

    2025

  • Nov 10 2025

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Nov 24 2025

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
The Pacific Science Association
Organized By
Shantou University
Xiamen University
Contact Information