Water (Apr 2024)

Effects of Three Antibiotics on Nitrogen-Cycling Bacteria in Sediment of Aquaculture Water

  • Zhu Li,
  • Huan He,
  • Jianhe Ding,
  • Zhizhong Zhang,
  • Yifei Leng,
  • Mingjun Liao,
  • Wen Xiong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w16091256
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 9
p. 1256

Abstract

Read online

Antibiotics are commonly used to prevent and control aquaculture diseases. However, long-term overuse of antibiotics not only leaves residues but also leads to changes in the nitrogen cycle in water, which threatens the survival of aquaculture organisms. The current results showed that sulfamethoxazole had no significant effect on the nitrogen cycle process in the actual aquaculture concentration. The inhibitory effect of 1.05 mg/L norfloxacin on ammonia-oxidizing bacteria was significantly greater than that on ammonia-oxidizing archaea, and the gene abundance of AOB amoA on the 14th day increased by 2.48 times compared with the 7th day. Under the influence of 3.9 mg/L oxytetracycline, the gene abundance of AOB amoA decreased significantly, while the number of AOA amoA genes increased, suggesting that there may be functional redundancy between AOA and AOB. At the genus level in the norfloxacin group, the relative abundance of Sva0485 increased by 14.0% on the 7th day compared with the control group but decreased 12.77% in the addition group. The relative abundance of Firmicutes, another dominant species in the oxytetracycline group, was 25.9%. This study shows that the addition of antibiotics may have a negative effect on the nitrogen-cycling microorganisms in aquaculture water.

Keywords