Toxicity and removal efficiency of pharmaceutical metabolite clofibric acid by Typha spp. – Potential use for phytoremediation?
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Elsevier
Abstract
A study was conducted to assess Typha spp.’s ability to withstand and remove, from water, a metabolite
of blood lipid regulator drugs, clofibric acid (CA). At a concentration of 20 lg L 1, Typha had removed
>50% of CA within the first 48 h, reaching a maximum of 80% by the end of the assay. Experimental conditions
assured that photodegradation, adsorption to vessel walls and microbial degradation did not contribute
to the removal. Exposure to higher CA concentrations did not affect Typha’s photosynthetic
pigments but the overall increase in enzyme activity (ascorbate and guaiacol peroxidases, catalase, superoxide
dismutase) indicates that both roots and leaves were affected by the xenobiotic. Eventually, Typha
seemed able to cope with the CA’s induced oxidative damage suggesting its ability for phytoremediation
of CA contaminated waters.
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Citation
Bioresource Technology 100 (2009) 1156–1161