4.8 Article

Subsurface Manure Injection Reduces Surface Transport of Antibiotic Resistance Genes but May Create Antibiotic Resistance Hotspots in Soils

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 21, Pages 14972-14981

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c00981

Keywords

liquid dairy manure; manure land management; antibiotic resistance genes; surface runoff; manure subsurface injection; ARG richness; relative abundance

Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture competitive [2017-67019-26401, 2017-68003-26498]
  2. School of Plant and Environmental Sciences at Virginia Tech
  3. Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station
  4. Hatch Program of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA [1007839]
  5. NIFA [1007839, 912561, 914738, 2017-67019-26401, 914814, 2017-68003-26498] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Compared to surface application, manure subsurface injection reduces the surface runoff of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), but may create long-term hotspots for elevated ARGs.
Compared to surface application, manure subsurface injection reduces surface runoff of nutrients, antibiotic resistant microorganisms, and emerging contaminants. Less is known regarding the impact of both manure application methods on surface transport of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in manure-amended fields. We applied liquid dairy manure to field plots by surface application and subsurface injection and simulated rainfall on the first or seventh day following application. The ARG richness, relative abundance (normalized to 16s rRNA), and ARG profiles in soil and surface runoff were monitored using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. Within 1 day of manure application, compared to unamended soils, soils treated with manure had 32.5-70.5% greater ARG richness and higher relative abundances of sulfonamide (6.5-129%) and tetracycline (752-3766%) resistance genes (p <= 0.05). On day 7, soil ARG profiles in the surface-applied plots were similar to, whereas subsurface injection profiles were different from, that of the unamended soils. Forty-six days after manure application, the soil ARG profiles in manure injection slits were 37% more diverse than that of the unamended plots. The abundance of manure-associated ARGs were lower in surface runoff from manure subsurface injected plots and carried a lower resistome risk score in comparison to surface-applied plots. This study demonstrated, for the first time, that although manure subsurface injection reduces ARGs in the runoff, it can create potential long-term hotspots for elevated ARGs within injection slits.

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