Pharmaceuticals in the Aquatic Environment: A Review on Eco-Toxicology and the Remediation Potential of Algae
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Pharmaceuticals as Contaminants of Emerging Concern
3. Conventional Wastewater Treatment and Pharmaceutical Removal Methods
4. Phycoremediation of Pharmaceuticals in Wastewater
Type of Contamination | Substance | Algae Species | Removal Rate | Time | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antibiotic | Enrofloxacin (ENR) | Platymonas subcordiformis Isochrysis galbana Scenedesmus obliquus Chlamydomonas mexicana Chlorella vulgaris Ourococcus multisporus Micractinium resseri | 75–85% *,1 40–70% *,1 23% 25% 26% 20% 26% | 11 d 11 d 11 d 11 d 11 d | [179] [179] [180] [180] [180] [180] [180] |
Ciprofloxacin hydrochloride (CIP) | Platymonas subcordiformis Isochrysis galbana Chlamydomonas mexicana | 65–85% *,1 40–76% *,1 13–56% 2 | 11 d | [179] [179] [180] | |
7-amino cephalosporanic acid (7-ACA) | Chlorella sp. Cha-01 Chlamydomonas sp. Tai-03 Mychonastes sp. YL-02 | >70% 70% * 65% * | 24 h 24 h 24 h | [181] [181] [181] | |
Cefradine (CFD) | Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Chlorella pyrenoidosa | 5–14% 41% | 8 h 24 h | [182] [183] | |
Amoxicillin | Chlorella pyrenoidosa | 91% | 6 h | [183] | |
Clarithromycine | A mixed population of wild freshwater green algal species (Dictyosphaerium) | 90% | 7 d | [184] | |
NSAID | Ibuprofen | Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chlorella sorokiniana Nannochloropsis sp. Scenedesmus obliquus | 29–31% 100% * 51–100% - | 42 d 31 d 10 d - | [185] [186] [187] [188] |
Diclofenac | Chlorella sorokiniana Chlorella sorokiniana Chlorella vulgaris Picocystis sp. Graesiella sp. Scenedesmus obliquus | 40–60% 30% 22% 73%, 43% and 25% (25, 50 and 100 mg L−1) 52%, 28% and 24% (25, 50 and 100 mg L−1) 79% | 31 d 9 d 9 d 9 d | [186] [189] [189] [189] [190] [189] | |
Naproxen | Scenedesmus quadricauda | 59%, 73%, 2% (1, 10 and 100 mg L−1 | 30 d | [109] | |
Paracetamol | Chlorella sorokiniana Chlorella sorokiniana Nannochloropsis sp | 100% * >67% from 50.5 to 44.4 μg mL−1 | 31 d 8–9 d 24 h | [186] [191] [187] | |
β-blocker | Atenolol | A mixed population of wild freshwater green algal species (Dictyosphaerium) | 99% | 7 d | [184] |
Bisoprolol | A mixed population of wild freshwater green algal species (Dictyosphaerium) | 97% | 7 d | [184] | |
Metoprolol | A mixed population of wild freshwater green algal species (Dictyosphaerium)Chlorella sorokiniana | 99% 100% * | 7 d 31 d | [184] [186] | |
Other drug | Alfuzosin Atracurium Bupropion Citalopram Clonazepam Dicycloverin Diltiazem Diphenhydramin Hydroxyzine Memantin Miconazole Pizotifen Terbutalin | A mixed population of wild freshwater green algal species (Dictyosphaerium) | 64% 97% 93% 98% 88% 71% 94% 89% 87% 81% 65% 80% 98% | 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d 7 d | [184] |
Carbamazepine | Chlorella sorokiniana | 30% | 7 d | [186] | |
Trimethoprim | Chlorella sorokiniana | 60% | 7 d | [186] | |
Salicylic acid | Chlorella sorokiniana | >73% | 8-9 d | [191] |
4.1. Mechanisms of Phycoremediation
4.2. Selected Factors Affecting Phycoremediation Efficiency
4.2.1. Light
4.2.2. pH Value
4.2.3. Temperature
4.2.4. Other Factors
5. Algae-Based Remediation Systems
Cultivation System | Mixing | Temperature | Gas Exchange | Limitations | Advantages | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Open systems | ||||||
Open ponds | Paddle wheel | None | Limited, through surface aeration | Less control over culturing conditions; temperature fluctuations; poor light utilization by the cells; inefficient stirring; diffusion of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere; lower biomass productivity; risk of contamination; large land space requirement | Simple design; cost-efficient; low investment costs; not difficult to maintain | [256] |
Closed systems | ||||||
Vertical column photobioreactors(bubble column photobioreactors and airlift columns) | Airlift or bubble | - | Open gas exchange at head space | Expensive construction materials; limited scale-up opportunities due to design constraints and inhomogeneous distribution of light inside the culture; productivity negatively affected by light-deprived zones; limited surface area for illumination; shading effect issues; photosynthetic efficiency depends on gas flow rate | Efficient mixing; high volumetric mass transfer rates; relatively homogenous culture environment; low photoinhibition; controllable growth conditions; lack of moving parts; no internal structures | [260,263] |
Stirred-tank photobioreactors | Mechanical agitator | Heat exchanger | Injection through sparger | Not cost-efficient; mechanical agitation requires extra energy; low surface-to-volume ratio; low harvesting efficiency; heating issues due to agitation | Appropriate light dispersion; appropriate heat and mass transfer; simple design; moderate biomass; low contamination issues; productive | [257,263] |
Flat-panel photobioreactors | Airlift or bubble from bottoms or side or rotating mechanically through motor | Heat exchangecoils | Open gas exchange at head space | Requires many components; short light penetration depth; frequent fouling and clean up issues; not scalable; poor temperature regulation | Cost-efficient; low space requirement; high surface-to-volume ratio; high photosynthetic efficiency; low oxygen build-up | [255,257,263] |
Horizontal tubular photobioreactors | Recirculation via pumps | Water spraying; shading; overlapping | Injection into feed | Large space requirement; high energy consumption; susceptible to photo inhibition; dissolved oxygen buildup; fouling due to algal growth; poor temperature regulation | Cost-efficient; harnessing sun light efficiently; suitable for outdoor cultivation; high surface-to-volume ratio; low hydrodynamic stress; good biomass productivity; low mutual shading effect | [257,263] |
Helical-type photobioreactors | Centrifugal pump (injection from bottom) | Heat exchanger | - | Limited commercial use associated with shear stress; fouling on the inside of the reactor | High photosynthetic efficiency through the light dilution effect and light absorbing capacity; high CO2 transfer; balance between energy input and photosynthetic efficiency; low energy requirement; low mechanical stress to cells | [257,264] |
5.1. Free Cell Cultures and Immobilized Algae
5.2. Algal–Bacterial Consortiums
Consortium | Class of Compounds | Compound | Cultivation System | Removal Rate | Contaminated Matrix | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pharmaceuticals | ||||||
Chlorella vulgaris with heterotrophs | Antibiotics | Tetracycline | High-rate algal ponds | 69% | Urban wastewater | [226] |
Chlorella sp., Pseudomonas aeuroginosa, Pseudominas sp. with Stenotrophomonas | A/A A/A NSAID NSAID | Paracetamol P-aminophenol Ketoprofen Salycilic acid | Stirred-tank packed-bed reactor | 100% 100% 98% 95% | Urban wastewater | [295] |
Artemia sp., Spirulina sp. with bacterial consortium | NSAID | Ketoprofen | 5 mM | Wastewater effluents | [296] | |
Algal–bacterial consortium from high-rate algal ponds | NSAID NSAID NSAID | Ibuprofen Naproxen Salicylic acid Triclosan Propylparaben | Photobioreactor operating at a hydraulic retention time | 94% 52% 98% 100% 100% | Urban wastewater | [292] |
Nutrients | ||||||
Chlorella vulgaris with Bacillus licheniformis and Microcystis aeruginosa with Bacillus licheniformis | - | TDN TDP COD | Reactor (conical flask) | 89% 80% 87% | Synthetic wastewater | [288] |
Scenedesmus quadricauda with bacteria from nitrogen-enriched activated sludge | - | NH4+ | 100% | Synthetic wastewater | [289] | |
Chlorella vulgaris with bacteria | - | P DOC NH4+ | Tabular photobioreactor | 98% 26% 97% | Municipal wastewater | [297] |
Scenedesmus sp. with bacteria | - | COD TN TP | 92% 95% 98% | Municipal wastewater | [298] | |
Chlamydomonas and Euglena with cyanobacteria, Microcystis aeruginosa | COD TN NH4+ TP BOD5 | Waste stabilization pond | 78% 87% 99% 97% 89% | Domestic wastewater | [299] | |
Chlorella vulgaris with bacteria | - | N TP COD | 100% 100% 90–95% | Synthetically made municipal wastewater | [300] | |
Metals | ||||||
Ulothrix sp. with bacteria consortium | - | Cu Ni Mn Zn | Laboratory-scale photo-rotating biological contactor | 50% 50% 40–45% 35% | Drainage wastewater | [11] |
Chlorella sp., Chlorella sp. and Scenedesmus obliquus with Rhodococcus sp. and Kibdelosporangium | - | Cu Ni Mn | - | 62% 62% 70% | Industrial wastewater | [12] |
Chlorella sorokiniana with Ralstonia basilensis | - | Cu | - | 8.5 mg/g | Synthetic wastewater | [301] |
5.3. Dead Biomass as a Biosorbent
6. Advantages, Challenges and Future Perspectives on Pharmaceutical Phycoremediation
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Surface Water (ng/L) | Reference | Wastewater (Effluents (E)/Influents (I)) (ng/L) | Reference | Drinking Water (DW)/Underground Water (UW) (ng/L) | Reference | Area |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ibuprofen | ||||||
<0.3–56.0 3730.1 222.0 2.2 0.0−346.0 21.0–2796.0 0.9−115.8 0.1−0.6 524.0−17,600.0 | [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] | 31,250.0 0−4926.0 (I) 20,130.0 0−10,600.0 (E) 0.2−1.9 | [43] [44] [46] [51] [49] | 223.6 (UW)/599.0 (DW) ND−1.2 92 5850.0 <LOD−17.2 7.0−836.7 | [43] [51] [51] [52] [53] | UK Poland Portugal Sweden Serbia North America China Taiwan Vietnam South Africa |
Diclofenac | ||||||
<0.5–261.0 5401.5 241.0 1.7−3.6 0−324 17.0–42.0 ND−1.5 0.3−0.4 1010.0−10,200.0 | [42] [43] [54] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] | 40,570.2 0–269.0 (I) 1338.0 286.0 0.1−1.0 | [43] [44] [46] [55] [49] | 2770.0 (GW)/114.3 (DW) <LOD−2.4 2.1−33.2 | [43] [52] [53] | UK Poland Portugal Sweden Serbia North America China Taiwan Vietnam South Africa |
Naproxen | ||||||
<0.3–55.0 1091.9 178.0 0.2 0−74.2 22.0 3.5 0.1−0.4 59,300.0 | [42] [43] [54] [45] [46] [47] [56] [49] [50] | 551,960.0 8.8−1617.0 (I) 208.0 23,210.0 (I) 470.0 0.1−0.6 | [43] [44] [46] [57] [55] [49] | 21.0 (GW)/13.0 (DW) 27.6 44.0 <LOD−3.1 128.0 | [43] [46] [58] [52] [53] | UK Poland Portugal Sweden Serbia North America China Taiwan Vietnam South Africa |
Ketoprofen | ||||||
<0.5–4.0 132.2 0.3−89.0 0.3−1.3 1.4−54.5 509 <0.5−0.5 443.0−9220.0 | [42] [43] [54] [45] [59] [60] [49] [50] | 233,630.0 289.0−589.0 (I) 247.0 0.1−1.6 | [43] [44] [46] [49] | 731.8 (GW)/166.9 (DW) 0.09 16.0 (DW) 4.1 (GW) ND | [43] [61] [46] [62] [63] | UK Poland Portugal Sweden Serbia China Vietnam South Africa |
Compound | Tested Organisms (Taxonomic Group) | Tested Concentration | Exposure Time | Effect (Acute and Chronic) | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plants | ||||||
Ibuprofen | Desmodeus subspicatus | Chlorophyta | 315.0 (mg/L) | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [73] | |
Lemna minor | Tracheophyta | 22.0 (mg/L) | 7 d | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [73] | |
Animals | ||||||
Ibuprofen | Cyprinus carpio | Pisces | 7.1 (mg/L) | 12, 24, 48, 72, 96 h | Genotoxic effects: DNA damage (the intensity of the tail DNA relative to the head). | [74] |
Cyprinus carpio | 1.5, 3.0, 4.5, 6.0, 7.5, 9.0, 11.5 (mg/L) | 96 h | Teratogenic effect: higher mortality of oocytes and delay in hatching. Delay in embryo development and embryo malformations. | [75] | ||
Danio rerio | 0.04, 0.2, 1.0, 5.0, 25.0 (mg/L) | 56 h | Reproduction disruption: disruption of cardiac physiology of embryos. | [76] | ||
Danio rerio | 0.000092 (mg/L) | Genotoxic effects: DNA fragmentation, apoptosis and genomic alterations. | [77] | |||
Danio rerio | 10.0, 100.0, 1000.0 (mg/L) | 14 d | Genotoxic effects: disruption of gonadotropin production. Increase in the transcription level of genes involved in the acceleration of gametogenesis, maturation of oocytes in females and spermatogenesis in males. | [78] | ||
Oryzias latipes | 0.0001 (mg/L) | 21 d | Genotoxic effects: influence of sex steroid hormones. Changes in the production of estradiol (E2). Endocrine-disrupting effect: significant increase in vitellogenin (VTG). | [79] | ||
Oryzias latipes | 0.01, 0.1, 1.0, 10.0, 100.0, 1000.0 (mg/L) | 132 d | Genotoxic effects: disruption of reproduction processes and early life stages. Reproduction disruption: delay in spawning. | [79] | ||
Crassostrea gigas | Molluscs | 1.0, 100.0 (mg/L) | 7 d | Gene expression disorder: differences in gene transcription in gill tissue. Significant upregulation of CYTP450 genes. | [80] | |
Dreissena polymorpha | 0.2, 1.0, 3.0 (mM) | 1 h | Acute cytogenotoxic effect: irreversible DNA damage and decrease in LMS. | [81] | ||
Dreissena polymorpha | 1.0, 9.0, 35.0 (nM) | 96 h | Oxidative stress: increase in activity levels of SOD, CAT, GPx and GST. | [82] | ||
Ruditapes philippinarum | 0.1, 5.0, 10.0, 50.0 (mg/L) | 35 d | Acute cytogenotoxic effect: decrease in LMS in haemolymph. | [83] | ||
Ruditapes philippinarum | 0.1, 5.0, 10.0, 50.0 (mg/L) | 14 d | Oxidative stress: increase in GPx activity and LPO. | [84] | ||
Ampelisca brevicornis | Crustaceans | 0.05, 0.5, 5.0, 50.0, 500.0 (ng/g) | 10 d | Oxidative stress: significant increase in DBF, GST and GPX activity. | [85] | |
Daphnia magna | 2.9 (mg/L) | 48, 96 h | Genotoxicity effect: DNA damage. | [86] | ||
Daphnia magna | 20.0, 40.0, 80.0 (mg/L) | 24 h | Endocrine disruption: deregulation of eicosanoid metabolism, the endocrine system and oogenesis. | [87] | ||
Daphnia magna | 20.0, 40.0, 80.0 (mg/L) | Decrease in reproduction or complete reproduction inhibition. | [88] | |||
Daphnia magna | 0.0005, 0.005, 0.05 (mg/L) | 21 d, 6 h | Oxidative stress: the induction of antioxidant enzymes (GST, SOD and CAT). Reproduction disruption: significant decrease in the total number of broods per female, body length and intrinsic growth rate. | [89] | ||
Hediste diversicolor | Polychaeta | 5.0, 500.0 (ng/g) | Genotoxic effect: DNA damage. | [90] | ||
Plants | ||||||
Diclofenac | Desmodeus subspicatus | Chlorophyta | 72.0 (mg/L) | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [73] | |
Dunaliella tertiolecta | 185.7 (mg/L) | 96 h | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [55] | ||
Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata | 20.0 (mg/L) | 96 h | Growth retardation. | [65] | ||
Scenedesmus vacuolatus | 23.0 (mg/L) | Inhibition of reproduction. | [91] | |||
Lemna minor | Tracheophyta | 7.5 (mg/L) | 7 d | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [73] | |
Polystichum setiferum | 0.0003 (mg/L) | 48 h | Hormetic effects in mitochondrial activity in spores. | [92] | ||
Animals | ||||||
Diclofenac | Cirrhinus mrigala | Pisces | 0.001 (mg/L) | 96 h | Oxidative stress: induction of enzymatic activity. | [93] |
Cyprinus carpio | 0.001 (mg/L) | 96 h | Alterations in hematological and biochemical activities. | [94] | ||
Cyprinus carpio | 17.6 (mg/L) | 12, 24, 48, 72, 96 h | Genotoxic effects: DNA damage (the intensity of the tail DNA relative to the head). | [74] | ||
Cyprinus carpio | 1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 (mg/L) | 21 d | Deformations: histopathological changes in gills, liver and kidney. Lesions included necrosis of epithelial cells. | [95] | ||
Danio rerio embryos | 12.5 (mg/L) | 48 h | Oxidative stress: deregulation of kinase activities. Metabolic disorders: deregulation of gluconeogenesis and lipid metabolism. | [96] | ||
Hoplias malabaricus | 0.2, 2.0, 20.0 (mg/kg) | Metabolic disorders: interferences with metabolic pathways. Oxidative stress: increase in the activity of SOD, GPx and GSH. | [97] | |||
Oncorhynchus mykiss | 0.005 (mg/L) | 28 d | Deformations: renal lesions and alterations in the gills. | [98] | ||
Oryzias latipes | 7.1, 37.0,78.0 (mg/L) | 14 d | Morphological abnormalities. | [99] | ||
Rhamdia quelen | 25.0 (mg/L) | Behavioral changes: respiratory disorders and loss of balance. | [100] | |||
Rhamdia quelen | 0.2, 2.0, 20.0 (mg/L) | 21 d | Oxidative stress: significant reduction in SOD activity, increase in activity of GSH and GST. Disruption of antioxidant defense systems in the liver. | [101] | ||
Brachionus calyciflorus | Rotatoria | 25.0 (mg/L) | 48 h | Reproduction retardation. | [65] | |
Dreissena polymorpha | Molluscs | 0.2, 0.5, 0.8 (mM) | 1 h | Acute cytogenotoxic effect: significant DNA damage. | [81] | |
Dreissena polymorpha | 1000.0 (mg/L) | 96 h | Oxidative stress: increase in GST activity, LPO expression and methallothioneins (MTs) alterations. | [102] | ||
Dreissena polymorpha | 0.001 (mg/L) | 96 h | Oxidative stress: high lipid peroxidation levels. Significant reduction in haemocyte viability. | [81,103] | ||
Perna perna | 20.0, 200.0, 2000.0 (ng/L) | 48, 96 h | Genotoxic effects: DNA damage. Significant decrease in LMS. Gene expression upregulation. COX inhibition in gill tissue. | [104] | ||
Atyaephyra desmarestii | Crustaceans | 13.3, 70.6 (mg/L) | 96 h | Metabolism disorder: decrease in respiration under reduced oxygen content. | [105] | |
Carcinus maenas | 0.00001, 0.0001 (mg/L) | Osmoregulation disturbances. Effect on haemolymph osmolality and osmolality capacity. | [106] | |||
Ceriodaphnia dubia | 2.0 (mg/L) | 7 d | Reproduction inhibition. | [65] | ||
Daphnia magna | 32.0 (mg/L) | 21 d | Oxidative stress. | [103] | ||
Daphnia magna | 9.7 (mg/L) | 48, 96 h | Genotoxicity effect: DNA damage. | [86] | ||
Arenicola marina | Polychaetes | From 0.6 to 842.0 (ng/L) | Reproduction disruption: decrease in swimming speed of sperm. | [107] | ||
Hediste diversicolor | 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 (mg/L) | 28 d | Gene expression upregulation: significant effect on the activity of GST enzymes. | [108] | ||
Plants | ||||||
Naproxen | Cymbella sp. | Ochrophyta | 102.8 (mg/L) | 72 h | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [109] |
Desmodeus subspicatus | Chlorophyta | >320.0 (mg/L) | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [73] | ||
Raphidocelis subcapitata | 0.0318 (mg/L) | 72 h | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [110] | ||
Scenedesmus quadricauda | 101.5 (mg/L) | 72 h | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [109] | ||
Scenedesmus subspicatus | 625.5 (mg/L) | 48 h | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [70] | ||
Lemna minor | Tracheophyta | 24.2 (mg/L) | 7 d | Growth inhibition (EC50). | [70] | |
Animals | ||||||
Naproxen | Danio rerio | Pisces | 1.0, 100.0 (mg/L) | 14 d | Gene expression: upregulation of gene expression. Metabolism disorders: upregulation of the activity of GST by affecting glutathione S-transferase P2 (GST P2) mRNA in the intestine. | [111] |
Oryzias latipes | 0.005, 0.05, 0.5, 5.0, 50.0 (mg/L) | Endocrine disruption: significant increase in the expression of VTG and E2 receptors genes. Reduction in conditions: decrease in the survival of juvenile animals. | [112] | |||
Daphnia magna | Crustaceans | 46.7 (mg/L) | 48 h | Immobilization (EC50). | [112] | |
Daphnia magna | 2.9 (mg/L) | 48, 96 h | Genotoxicity effect: DNA damage. Oxidative stress: increase in enzyme activity (SOD, CAT and GPx). | [86] | ||
Hyalella azteca | 76.6, 339.2 (mg/kg) | 48 h | Genotoxicity effect: DNA damage. Oxidative stress: increase in SOD and CAT activity and decrease in GPX activity. | [113] | ||
Moina macrocopa | 74.1 (mg/L) | 48 h | Immobilization (EC50). | [112] | ||
Elliptio complanata | Molluscus | 0.6 to 23.0 (mg/L) | 24 h | Immunotoxic effects. Phagocytic activity, intracellular esterase activity, cell adherence and lipid peroxidation. | [114] | |
Hydra magnipapillata | Cnidaria | LC50 52.0, 45.0, 43.0 (mg/L) | 24, 48, 72 h | Morphological changes: stimulation of the contraction of the body column and tentacles. Genotoxicity effect: DNA damage or instability. | [115] | |
Plants | ||||||
Ketoprofen | Lemna minor | Tracheophyta | 0.2, 1.2, 6.0, 30.0 (mg/L) | 4 d | Oxidative stress: alterations in enzyme activities (CAT, GSTs and CA). | [116] |
Animals | ||||||
Ketoprofen | Ceriodaphnia dubia | Crustaceans | From 1.0 to 1000.0 (mg/L) | Chronic toxicity. Effects on reproduction at the highest concentration. | [117] | |
Daphnia magna | 0.2, 1.2, 6.0, 30.0 (mg/L) | 4 d | Oxidative stress: alterations in enzyme activities (CAT, GSTs and CA). | [116] | ||
Mytilus galloprovincialis | Molluscus | 0.0025 (mg/L) | 14, 30, 60 d | Alterations in immunological parameters, genotoxic effects and modulation of lipid metabolism. Reduction in lysosomal membrane stability. | [118] | |
Planorbarius corneus | 100.0 (mg/g) | 48 h | Antipyretic effect. Inhibition of symptoms of behavioral fever and influenced thermal preference. | [119] |
Carrier Used | Group of Carrier | Algae Species | Removed Contaminants | References |
Alginate | Organic carrier (natural polymers) | Chlorella | Ni, Zn, Cd | [277] |
Pediastrum boryanum | Cr (VI) | [278] | ||
Chlorella vulgaris | Cu, Ni | [279] | ||
Alginate beads | Chlorella emersonii | Hg | [280] | |
Tetraselmis chui | Cu, Cd | [9] | ||
Alginate gel | Isochrysis galbana | Cr (III) | [281] | |
Alginate | Dunaliella salina | P | [282] | |
Alginate | Chlorella vulgaris Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | Pb | [3] | |
Alginate | Scenedesmus intermedius | N, P | [272] | |
Chitosan | Organic carrier (natural polymers) | Scenedesmus spp. | Nitrate, phosphate | [283] |
Carrageenan beads | Organic carrier (natural polymers) | Scenedesmus acutus Chlorella vulgaris | Zn, Cd, Cr | [284] |
Carrageenan | Anabaena doliolum Chlorella vulgaris | N, P | [285] | |
Polyurethane foam | Organic carrier (synthetic polymers) | Scenedesmus acutus Chlorella vulgaris | Zn, Cd, Cr | [284] |
Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) beads | Organic carrier (synthetic polymers) | Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | U (VI) | [7] |
Silica gel | Organic carrier (synthetic polymers) | Chlorella vulgaris | Hg | [286] |
Glass beads | Inorganic carrier | Aulosira fertilissima | Ni, Cr | [287] |
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Hejna, M.; Kapuścińska, D.; Aksmann, A. Pharmaceuticals in the Aquatic Environment: A Review on Eco-Toxicology and the Remediation Potential of Algae. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7717. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137717
Hejna M, Kapuścińska D, Aksmann A. Pharmaceuticals in the Aquatic Environment: A Review on Eco-Toxicology and the Remediation Potential of Algae. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7717. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137717
Chicago/Turabian StyleHejna, Monika, Dominika Kapuścińska, and Anna Aksmann. 2022. "Pharmaceuticals in the Aquatic Environment: A Review on Eco-Toxicology and the Remediation Potential of Algae" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7717. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137717