Removal of antibiotics during the anaerobic digestion of pig manure

Sci Total Environ. 2017 Dec 15:603-604:219-225. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.05.280. Epub 2017 Jun 23.

Abstract

Antibiotics are frequently used in animals to treat sickness and prevent infection especially in industrial meat production. Some of the antibiotics cannot be completely metabolized and, as an unavoidable result, are excreted and thus end up in manure which is then spread in the environment. Currently increasing amounts of manure is used in biogas production before spreading the residuals on agricultural fields. In this study, the removal patterns of sulfonamides (sulfadiazine, sulfamethizole, sulfamethoxazole) and macrolides (clarithromycin, erythromycin), as well as trimethoprim, were investigated during the anaerobic digestion of pig manure. Batch kinetic tests were conducted both at thermophilic and psychrophilic condition for 40 days. Some of the antibiotics (clarithromycin, sulfadiazine, sulfamethizole) were persistent in all experiments. Thus, no biodegradation was found for sulfadiazine and sulfamethizole in this study. From the studied compounds, only erythromycin was clearly removed and probably degraded during anaerobic digestion with 99% and 20% removal under thermophilic and psychrophilic condition. The removal of erythromycin was fitted to a single first-order kinetic reaction function, giving reaction rate constant of 0.29day-1 and 0.005day-1, respectively.

Keywords: Erythromycin; Macrolide; Psychrophilic; Sulfonamide; Thermophilic.

MeSH terms

  • Anaerobiosis
  • Animals
  • Anti-Bacterial Agents / isolation & purification*
  • Biodegradation, Environmental*
  • Biofuels
  • Clarithromycin
  • Erythromycin / isolation & purification
  • Manure
  • Methane
  • Sulfadiazine
  • Sulfamethizole
  • Swine
  • Waste Disposal, Fluid*

Substances

  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Biofuels
  • Manure
  • Sulfadiazine
  • Sulfamethizole
  • Erythromycin
  • Clarithromycin
  • Methane