4.7 Article

Leaching of Sulfadiazine and Florfenicol in an Entisol of a Chicken-Raising Orchard: Impact of Manure-Derived Dissolved Organic Matter

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12123228

Keywords

antibiotics; leaching; mass flux; manure; EEM-PARAFAC; farmland

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [41771521]
  3. [2022YFS0500]

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Antibiotic pollution from manured farmland soils is a major public concern. This study investigated the leaching behavior of sulfadiazine and florfenicol with manure-dissolved organic matter, and found that soil hydrological processes and heavy rainfall events accelerated the leaching of antibiotics. Manure-dissolved organic matter reduced the mass flux of sulfadiazine but facilitated the transport of florfenicol.
Antibiotic pollution from manured farmland soils is a major public concern, and their potential interaction with manure particles and/or manure-dissolved organic matter (DOM) often complicates their leaching behaviour. This study investigated the leaching of sulfadiazine (SDZ) and florfenicol (FFC) with manure-DOM in undisturbed field lysimeters and repacked soil columns under natural and simulated rainfall conditions. The results showed that manure-DOM reduced SDZ mass flux, but soil hydrological processes and heavy rainfall events led to accelerated leaching. FFC was more prone to leaching in a manured plot (0.48 mu g m(-2) h(-1)) compared to the control (0.12 mu g m(-2) h(-1)), suggesting DOM facilitated transport of FFC in the field lysimeter study via cotransport mechanisms favored by abundant macropores in the study site. In contrast, SDZ and FFC mobility were reduced in repacked soil columns under manure-DOM conditions, suggesting complexation and adsorption in matrix pores. Two kinetic site models and two-site nonequilibrium adsorption models revealed the existence of nonequilibrium conditions and kinetic sorption processes in the repacked column. FFC exhibited lower leaching potential compared to SDZ in both the repacked column and natural field conditions. Redundancy analyses revealed that FFC had a close relationship with humic-like components (C1 and C3), but SDZ was more related to the protein-like components (C2) of DOM. The presence of manure-DOM may decrease the ecological risks of highly mobile antibiotics under matrix flow through complexations and adsorption. However, a similar scenario in macroporous flow under heavy rainfalls may lead to accelerated leaching.

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