Researchers, including those at the Ca' Foscari University of Venice in Italy, have been investigating the canals to look for traces of these molecules which are referred to as 'perfumes' in the ingredients of products that we use daily.
Soaps, detergents, shampoos and many other personal hygiene products contain mixtures of 'odorous' molecules that have passed safety tests for human health with little or nothing known about their impact on the environment.
They were looking for the presence of 17 fragrances among the most used and chemically stable between the thousands available to the cosmetics industry.
Samples collected during conditions of low tide in Venice and Burano showed concentrations comparable to those of untreated waste water.
In Venice, the city without sewers, wastewater treated through biological tanks which then flow directly into the canals thus seems an insufficient method of lowering the concentration of these molecules, researchers said.
"Ours is a pioneering study on the persistence of a new class of potential contaminants in the environment," said Marco Vecchiato from Ca' Foscari.
"After this first analysis, we can confirm that fragrances are released continuously into the canals of Venice, both during high and low tide and both in the historic centre and the lagoon.
"According to our data, however, the concentrations seem to be below the threshold for acute toxicity to marine organisms. That being said, we do not know the consequences of prolonged exposure to low doses of these substances. This study is thus the first step in gauging an understanding of its environmental fate," said Vecchiato.
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