Publication details

Fate of fluoroquinolones in field soil environment after incorporation of poultry litter from a farm with enrofloxacin administration via drinking water

Authors

FUCIK Jan AMRICHOVA Anna BRABCOVA Kristyna KARPÍŠKOVÁ Renata KOLÁČKOVÁ Ivana POKLUDOVA Lucie POLAKOVA Sarka MRAVCOVA Ludmila

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Environmental Science and Pollution Research
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-024-32492-x
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-024-32492-x
Keywords Veterinary antimicrobials; Fluoroquinolones; Manure fertilization; Antimicrobial resistance; Solid phase extraction; Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; PCR
Description The practice of incorporating animal manure into soil is supported within the European Circular economy as a possible substitute for mineral fertilizers and will become crucial for the sustainability of agriculture. However, this practice may indirectly contribute to the dissemination of antibiotics, resistance bacteria, and resistance genes. In this study, medicated drinking water and poultry litter samples were obtained from a broiler-chick farm. The obtained poultry litter was incorporated into the soil at the experimental field site. The objectives of this research project were first to develop analytical methods able to quantify fluoroquinolones (FQs) in medicated drinking water, poultry litter, and soil samples by LC-MS; second to study the fate of these FQs in the soil environment after incorporation of poultry litter from flock medicated by enrofloxacin (ENR); and third to screen the occurrence of selected fluoroquinolone resistance encoding genes in poultry litter and soil samples (PCR analysis). FQs were quantified in the broiler farm's medicated drinking water (41.0 +/- 0.3 mg center dot L-1 of ENR) and poultry litter (up to 70 mg center dot kg-1 of FQs). The persistence of FQs in the soil environment over 112 days was monitored and evaluated (ENR concentrations ranged from 36 mu g center dot kg-1 to 9 mu g center dot kg-1 after 100 days). The presence of resistance genes was confirmed in both poultry litter and soil samples, in agreement with the risk assessment for the selection of AMR in soil based on ENR concentrations. This work provides a new, comprehensive perspective on the entry and long-term fate of antimicrobials in the terrestrial environment and their consequences after the incorporation of poultry litter into agricultural fields.

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