Modeling of Steroid Estrogen Contamination in UK and
South Australian Rivers Predicts Modest Increases in Concentrations
in the Future
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Abstract
The prediction of
risks posed by pharmaceuticals and personal care
products in the aquatic environment now and in the future is one of
the top 20 research questions regarding these contaminants following
growing concern for their biological effects on fish and other animals.
To this end it is important that areas experiencing the greatest risk
are identified, particularly in countries experiencing water stress,
where dilution of pollutants entering river networks is more limited.
This study is the first to use hydrological models to estimate concentrations
of pharmaceutical and natural steroid estrogens in a water stressed
catchment in South Australia alongside a UK catchment and to forecast
their concentrations in 2050 based on demographic and climate change
predictions. The results show that despite their differing climates
and demographics, modeled concentrations of steroid estrogens in effluents
from Australian sewage treatment works and a receiving river were
predicted (simulated) to be similar to those observed in the UK and
Europe, exceeding the combined estradiol equivalent’s predicted
no effect concentration for feminization in wild fish. Furthermore,
by 2050 a moderate increase in estrogenic contamination and the potential
risk to wildlife was predicted with up to a 2-fold rise in concentrations