Occurrence of glucocorticogenic activity in various surface waters in The Netherlands

Authors
  • M. Schriks
  • S.C. van der Linden
  • P.G.M. Stoks
  • B. van der Burg
Publication date 2013
Journal Chemosphere
Volume | Issue number 93 | 2
Pages (from-to) 450-454
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Considering the important role that surface waters serve for drinking water production, it is important to know if these resources are under the impact of contaminants. Apart from environmental pollutants such as pesticides, compounds such as (xeno)estrogens have received al lot of research attention and several large monitoring campaigns have been carried out to assess estrogenic contamination in the aquatic environment. The introduction of novel in vitro bioassays enables researchers to study if - and to what extent - water bodies are under the impact of less-studied (synthetic) hormone active compounds. The aim of the present study was to carry out an assessment on the presence and extent of glucocorticogenic activity in Dutch surface waters that serve as sources for drinking water production. The results show glucocorticogenic activity in the range of <LOD - 2.4 ng dexamethasone equivalents L−1 (dex EQs) in four out of eight surface waters. An exploratory time-series study to obtain a more complete picture of the yearly average of fluctuating glucocorticogenic activities at two sample locations demonstrated glucocorticogenic activities ranging between <LOD - 2.7 ng dex EQs L−1. Although immediate human health effects are unlikely, the environmental presence of glucocorticogenic compounds in the ng L−1 range compels further environmental research and assessment.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2013.04.091
Permalink to this page
Back