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Florida Keys city to replace sewage wells following research findings

  • Florida Keys city to replace sewage wells following research findings
  • New research published by a team of scientists led by FIU's Jennifer Rehage and Ph.D. student Nicholas Castillo shows a widespread presence of pharmaceuticals throughout the coastal marine ecosystems of the Caribbean Basin.
  • Of all bonefish sampled, pharmaceuticals were detected in every fish, including those found in waters near urban populous communities and those in less developed and less populated regions.
  • Their results also show pharmaceuticals have the potential to bioaccumulate in marine animals at concentrations capable of eliciting pharmacological effects.

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Florida International University
As Miami's first and only public research university, offering bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees, FIU is worlds ahead in its service to the academic and local community.

The Marathon City Council says it will end the use of shallow sewage wells, a move that could drastically reduce the pervasive pharmaceutical contamination in local fish populations uncovered by FIU scientists.

The announcement was made following a settlement with the citizen-based group Friends of the Lower Keys, which filed a lawsuit against the city in 2022 for alleged violations of the federal Clean Water Act and Endangered Species Act.

Earlier this year, the city council agreed to a series of steps to resolve the wastewater issues outlined in the lawsuit and the settlement terms were approved by a unanimous vote of the council earlier this week. Multiple research studies have been conducted in recent years, including those by FIU and other universities, which concluded that the existing shallow wells release nutrients and other contaminants to surface water in the Florida Keys.

Among the findings, FIU Earth and Environment Professor Jennifer Rehage identified pharmaceutical contaminants in local fish, including blood pressure medications, antidepressants, prostate treatment medications, antibiotics, and pain relievers. Researchers also found pharmaceuticals in fish prey—crabs, shrimp, and other fish—suggesting that many of Florida's valuable fisheries are exposed to these contaminants.

The study, which was conducted in collaboration with Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, found an average of seven pharmaceuticals in the fish they sampled, though one tested positive for 17 different medications. Marathon's City Council outlined a timeline to replace the shallow sewage wells with a completion date of 2028. The new deep well will be sited at least 3,000 feet deep and into the boulder zone.

"This is a monumental achievement by a group of local volunteers," said Rehage, whose research is a core component of the comprehensive water quality work being conducted by the team of researchers in FIU's Institute of Environment. "Those local waters are the nurseries for our fisheries, and a deep well is definitely going to help protect them."

Approximately 5 billion prescriptions are filled each year in the U.S., yet there are no environmental regulations for the disposal of pharmaceuticals worldwide. Pharmaceutical contaminants often originate from human wastewater and are not sufficiently removed by conventional water treatment. They remain active at low doses and can be released constantly, and exposure can affect all aspects of fish behavior, negatively affecting their reproduction and survival. Pharmaceutical contaminants have been shown to affect all aspects of fish life, including their feeding, activity, sociability, and migratory behavior.

"It was incredibly meaningful to put our pharmaceutical data to do good for keys water quality," Rehage said.

The research was published in Chemosphere.

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