Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8852048 | Chemosphere | 2018 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the fate of commonly used veterinary antibiotics in their naturally excreted form when manure-based amendments are applied to soil. Beef cattle were administered sulfamethazine, tylosin, and chlortetracycline and dairy cows were treated with pirlimycin. The resulting manure was composted for 42â¯d under static or turned conditions and applied at agronomic N rates to sandy, silt, and silty clay loam soils and compared with amendment with corresponding raw manures in sacrificial microcosms over a 120-day period. Antibiotic dissipation in the raw manure-amended soils followed bi-phasic first order kinetics. The first phase half-lives for sulfamethazine, tylosin, chlortetracycline, and pirlimycin ranged from 6.0 to 18, 2.7 to 3.7, 23 to 25, and 5.5-8.2â¯d, respectively. During the second phase, dissipation of sulfamethazine was negligible, while the half-lives for tylosin, chlortetracycline, and pirlimycin ranged from 41 to 44, 75 to 144, and 87-142â¯d, respectively. By contrast, antibiotic dissipation in the compost-amended soils followed single-phase first order kinetics with negligible dissipation of sulfamethazine and half-lives of tylosin and chlortetracycline ranging from 15 to 16 and 49-104â¯d, respectively. Pirlimycin was below the detection limit in the compost-amended soils. After incubating 120â¯d, antibiotics in compost-amended soils (up to 3.1â¯Î¼gâ¯kgâ1) were significantly lower than in manure-amended soils (up to 19â¯Î¼gâ¯kgâ1, pâ¯<â¯.0001), with no major effect of soil type on the dissipation. Risk assessment suggested that composting can reduce antibiotic resistance selection potential in manure-amended soils.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Environmental Science
Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Chaoqi Chen, Partha Ray, Katharine F. Knowlton, Amy Pruden, Kang Xia,