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Download fileInfluence of Setback Distance on Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Runoff and Soil Following the Land Application of Swine Manure Slurry
journal contribution
posted on 2020-04-01, 17:04 authored by Maria
C. Hall, Noelle A. Mware, John E. Gilley, Shannon L. Bartelt-Hunt, Daniel D. Snow, Amy M. Schmidt, Kent M. Eskridge, Xu LiThe
environmental spread of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance
genes (ARGs) from the land application of livestock wastes can be
a potential public health threat. The objective of this study was
to assess the effects of setback distance, which determines how close
manure may be applied in relation to surface water, on the transport
of antibiotics and ARGs in runoff and soil following land application
of swine manure slurry. Rainfall simulation tests were conducted on
field plots covered with wheat residues, each of which contained an
upslope manure region where slurry was applied and an adjacent downslope
setback region that did not receive slurry. Results show that all
three antibiotics (chlortetracycline, lincomycin, and tiamulin) and
seven out of the ten genes tested (erm(B), erm(C), intI1, tet(O), tet(Q), tet(X), and the 16S rRNA gene)
decreased significantly in runoff with increased setback distance.
Only blaTEM, chlortetracycline, and tiamulin
decreased significantly in surface soil with increased setback distance,
while the other analytes did not exhibit statistically significant
trends. By using linear regression models with field data, we estimate
that a setback distance between 34–67 m may allow manure-borne
antibiotics and ARGs in runoff to reach background levels under the
experimental conditions tested.