Abstract

Taking into account environmental and public health issues due to emerging pollutants, and specifically to antibiotics spread into environmental compartments, this work focused on the competition among three tetracycline antibiotics (tetracycline, CT; oxytetracycline, OTC; and chlortetracycline, CTC) for adsorption sites in six different soils. Batch-type adsorption/desorption tests were carried out, with 24 h as contact time. The six soils were from two different farming areas, and were selected according to pH values and organic matter contents. Binary systems (pairs of antibiotics present simultaneously) were used to study competition, setting the dose of one antibiotic at 200 μmol L−1, and varying the concentration of another from 50 to 600 μmol L−1. In the case of the concentration of 200 μmol L−1, the results of the binary systems were also compared with those obtained in simple and ternary systems. The results showed that those soils with the highest organic matter content (soils 50AL and 71S) adsorbed 100% of the three antibiotics, with desorption being <10% in all cases. The other four soils showed some degree of competition for adsorption sites in binary systems, with adsorption decreasing between 25 and 47% compared to simple systems, and with desorption increasing, especially in soils with higher pH and less organic matter. This competition was even more pronounced in ternary systems, affecting to these same soils, while the effects were very scarce in soils with higher organic matter content. The results indicate that most of the studied soils have high adsorption capacity for tetracycline antibiotics, retaining them with high energy even in the case of multiple systems. It was also shown that hysteresis affected adsorption/desorption processes. These results have relevance at environmental and social levels, given the growing concern regarding antibiotics pollution, and the need of promoting their retention and inactivation when spread in environmental compartments.

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