Absorption–Translocation of Veterinary Antibiotics in Rice Plants Introduced with Irrigation Water

Author:

Duong Van Hay1,Seo Il-Hwan2ORCID,Jeon Hee Su3,Cho Jae Young3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agronomy, Institute of Agricultural Sciences for Southern Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh City 710302, Vietnam

2. Department of Rural Construction Engineering, College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Jeonbuk National University, 567 Baekje-daero, Jeonju-si 54896, Jeonbuk, Republic of Korea

3. Department of Bioenvironmental Chemistry, Jeonbuk National University, 567 Baekje-daero, Jeonju-si 54896, Jeonbuk, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Veterinary antibiotics (VAs) have been indiscriminately used in animal feed for the past five decades to increase and ensure profits with negligible environmental considerations. The VAs amoxicillin (AMX), chlortetracycline (CTC), and oxytetracycline (OTC), which can be unintentionally introduced by irrigation water during rice cultivation, were evaluated for their phytotoxic effects, absorption–translocation into plants, and soil residues using a randomized complete block design. It was found that exposure to VAs can severely affect the photosynthetic pathway of rice plants. The uptake and translocation of VAs by rice plants varied significantly. CTC and OTC translocated more easily than AMX, a member of the β-lactam class, which accumulated at the lowest concentration compared to CTC and OTC across all treatments. Rice yield was about 4.3–5.7% lower in the experimental plots that received fifty-fold the background levels of VAs compared to the control. The findings indicate that these widely used veterinary antibiotics can hamper crop production, leave residues in the soil, and constitute a risk to human health if introduced into the agro-ecosystem unintentionally.

Funder

Jeonbuk National University

Cooperative Research Programs for Agricultural Science and Technology Development

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science

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