Occurrence and human dietary assessment of sulfonamide antibiotics in cultured fish around Tai Lake, China

As the most important fishery medicines, sulfonamides are widely used to prevent diseases caused by pathogens in aquaculture. However, relatively little is known about the residues and dietary risks associated with cultured fish around Tai Lake. In the present study, a sampling strategy for a comple...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2017-07, Vol.24 (21), p.17493-17499
Hauptverfasser: Song, Chao, Li, Le, Zhang, Cong, Kamira, Barry, Qiu, Liping, Fan, Limin, Wu, Wei, Meng, Shunlong, Hu, Gengdong, Chen, Jiazhang
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container_end_page 17499
container_issue 21
container_start_page 17493
container_title Environmental science and pollution research international
container_volume 24
creator Song, Chao
Li, Le
Zhang, Cong
Kamira, Barry
Qiu, Liping
Fan, Limin
Wu, Wei
Meng, Shunlong
Hu, Gengdong
Chen, Jiazhang
description As the most important fishery medicines, sulfonamides are widely used to prevent diseases caused by pathogens in aquaculture. However, relatively little is known about the residues and dietary risks associated with cultured fish around Tai Lake. In the present study, a sampling strategy for a complete aquaculture period was conducted. Specifically, 12 selected sulfonamide antibiotics were measured among 116 fish samples recruited from four sampling periods, four species, four areas, and 18 fish ponds. All 12 antibiotics were detected at detection frequencies of 4.31–28.45%. Total sulfonamides were detected in 77.59% of the fish samples, with 57.76% of fish samples containing from 0.1 to 10 μg kg −1 . Sulfadiazine (SDZ), sulfamethoxazole (SMZ), sulfamethazine (SDD), and sulfamonomethoxine (SMM) were the main types of antibiotics used, and these were present at high concentrations (>100 μg kg −1 ) with high occurrences, especially in the middle of the aquaculture season. Dietary assessment showed that residual antibiotics in all fish that were being sent to market were far below the maximum residue limit (MRL) of total sulfonamides and that there was almost no risk associated with fish consumption. The results of the present study will facilitate development of effective measures to produce safe aquatic products and meaningful suggestions for consuming aquatic products.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11356-017-9442-2
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subjects Animals
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Antibiotics
Aquaculture
Aquatic Pollution
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
China
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecotoxicology
Environment
Environmental Chemistry
Environmental Health
Environmental science
Fish
Fish ponds
Fisheries
Fishes
Food Contamination
Humans
Lakes
Nutrition Assessment
Ponds
Research Article
Sampling
Sulfadiazine
Sulfamethazine
Sulfamethoxazole
Sulfamonomethoxine
Sulfonamides
Waste Water Technology
Water Management
Water Pollution Control
title Occurrence and human dietary assessment of sulfonamide antibiotics in cultured fish around Tai Lake, China
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