Ecotoxicological assessment of doxycycline in aged pig manure using multispecies soil systems
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This digital document is a journal article from Science of the Total Environment, The, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
This paper assesses the ecotoxicity of the antibiotic doxycycline in aged spiked pig manure using a multispecies soil system (MS 3) covering plants, earthworms and soil microorganisms. The study reproduced realistic exposure conditions, as well as higher exposure doses covering the uncertainty factors typically employed for covering interspecies variability. MS 3, consisting of columns of natural sieved soil assembled with earthworms and seeds from three plant species, were employed. Pig manure was spiked with doxycycline (75 or 7500 @mg/ml), aged for 15 days under aerobic/anaerobic conditions and added on top of the soil columns (120 ml/column, equivalent to 220 kgN/ha). Water and doxycycline free manure were used as negative controls. Doxycycline (7500 @mg/ml) solution was used as a positive control. No effects on plants or earthworms were observed. Significant effects on soil phosphatase activity, indicating effects on soil microorganisms, were observed at the highest exposure dose, affecting all soil layers in the doxycycline-solution-treated MS 3 (positive control) but only the top layer in the spiked pig manure system. Chemical analysis confirmed the different behavior of doxycycline in both systems (with and without manure) and those effects were observed in soil with measured concentrations over 1 mg/kg soil. The detection of doxycycline in leachates revealed a potential mobility. Leachate concentrations were similar for doxycycline solution and spiked manure treatments.
Ecotoxicological assessment of doxycycline in aged pig manure using multispecies soil systems






