We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Heavy metals and microplastics derived from laboratory effluents enhance toxicological risks to the ecosystems of canals in Bangladesh
Summary
A survey of canals in Bangladesh receiving laboratory effluents found both toxic heavy metals (lead, cadmium, chromium, arsenic) and diverse microplastic types — fibers, fragments, and microbeads — accumulating across sediment, water, fish, crabs, and snails. This demonstrates that even small institutional waste streams can contaminate entire local food webs with both chemical and plastic pollutants.
The occurrence of chemical effluents in different water bodies is an emerging concern. However, the effect of laboratory effluents on the canal ecosystem in Bangladesh is largely unknown. In this study, we collected 10 components of the canal ecosystem including sediments, water, fish, crabs, snails, phytoplanktons, and weeds specifically from canals that directly receive laboratory effluents. We examined the occurrence of both the essential (Fe, Mn, Cu, and Zn) and toxic (Pb, Cd, Cr, Co, Ni, and As) metals as well as microplastics (MPs). Results explored that laboratory effluents strongly interact with the components of the canal ecosystem and enhance the abundance of toxic metals in the canal hydrosystem. Furthermore, diverse types of MPs including fibers, fragments, and microbeads were observed in all components of the canal ecosystem. Remarkably, our results unveiled that the co-occurrence of pollutants was more severe in benthic organisms like snails or crabs might be due to their omnivorous food habits. The cumulative pollutant accumulation was much higher in all components of the canal ecosystem indicating a greater ecological risk. Although the potential risk index (RI) or hazardous index (HI) from fish ingestion was found within acceptable limits, the biomagnification of pollutants due to repeated ingestions may have strong ecotoxicological impacts even at very low concentrations.