Fate of ivermectin in the terrestrial and aquatic environment: mobility, degradation, and toxicity towards Daphnia similis
2016
Rath, Susanne | Pereira, Leandro Alves | Bosco, Sandra Maria Dal | Maniero, Milena Guedes | Fostier, Anne Hélène | Guimarães, José Roberto
Ivermectin (IVM) is a broad-spectrum antiparasitic drug that is regularly employed in veterinary medicine. In this work, the sorption and desorption of IVM in two Brazilian soils (N1-sand and S2-clay) as well as its leaching capacity, dissipation under aerobic conditions, and degradation in aqueous solution by photocatalysis with TiO₂ in suspension were evaluated. The kinetic sorption curves of IVM were adjusted to a pseudo-second-order model. The sorption and desorption data were well fitted with the Freundlich isotherms in the log form (r > 0.96). The Freundlich sorption coefficient (K F ᵃᵈˢ) and the Freundlich desorption coefficient (K F ᵈᵉˢ) were 77.7 and 120 μg¹⁻¹/ⁿ (cm³)¹/ⁿ g⁻¹ and 74.5 and 138 μg¹⁻¹/ⁿ (cm³)¹/ⁿ g⁻¹, for soils N1 and S2, respectively. A greater leaching capacity of IVM was observed for the sandy soil N1 than for the clay soil S2. Under aerobic conditions, the dissipation (DT₅₀) at 19.3 °C was 15.5 days (soil N1) and 11.5 days (soil S2). Photocatalysis with UVC and TiO₂ in suspension resulted in the degradation of 98 % of IVM (500 μg L⁻¹) in water in 600 s. The toxicity (Daphnia similis) of the solutions submitted to the photocatalytic process was completely eliminated after 10 min.
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