Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jul 2023)

Competitive adsorption and desorption of three antibiotics in distinct soil aggregate size fractions

  • Shiquan Lv,
  • Fangxu Rong,
  • Shuxiang Hu,
  • Guizhen Wang,
  • Jing Liu,
  • Guoqin Hou,
  • Yuzhi Xu,
  • Mingyue Li,
  • Kai Liu,
  • Aiju Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 259
p. 115002

Abstract

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Multiple antibiotics that are used in veterinary medicine coexist in soils, but their interaction and the effects on adsorption and desorption in soils have not been extensively studied. In this study, using batch experiments, we evaluated the adsorption and desorption of sulfadiazine (SDZ), tetracycline (TC), and norfloxacin (NFX) using four different soil aggregate size fractions and discovered that: (1) TC had the highest adsorption (76–98 %) and the lowest desorption in each tested system, whereas SDZ showed opposite adsorption and desorption ability, (2) the highest adsorption and the lowest desorption of all three tested antibiotics were observed with soil macroaggregates (250–2000 µm) in all the cases; in contrast, opposite adsorption and desorption ability were observed for soil clay ( binary system (56–84 %) > ternary system (50–78 %); however, desorption were in the reverse order. The Freundlich equation fitting and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) analysis further demonstrated that the adsorption competition between the tested antibiotics depended mainly on the specific surface area of each soil aggregate size fractions and its chemical properties. In conclusion, soil macroaggregates play a key role in the retention of antibiotics in soils, and the coexistence of multiple antibiotics greatly increases leaching risk.

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