Abstract

The veterinary antibiotic Sulfamethazine (SMZ) contaminates soils via manure applications. Like other soil contaminants (herbicides, fungicides, and nematicides), it has to be degraded. The main challenge is that SMZ biodegradation with bacteria is impeded, since SMZ is a bacteriostatic antibiotic, designed to block microbes in their growth. In this study, we enriched the indigenous soil microbial community (including the single strain Microbacterium sp. C448, adapted to SMZ degradation) from a Canadian soil and we present a suitable approach, for soil remediation by inoculating a German soil with this microbial community established on carrier particles, at environmentally relevant concentrations of 1 mg kg−1. When compared with the isolated SMZ-degrading strain (also obtained from Canada), the microbial community outperformed the mineralization rates of the isolated strain in soil. The negligible soil native SMZ mineralization was successfully increased to 44 and 57 % within 46 days, by the microbial community. The sustainability of this increased SMZ mineralization capacity was proven by the rapid mineralization of a second application of 14C-SMZ 112 days after the first. The pronounced SMZ mineralization and the high amount of non-extractable 14C-residues (NER) in the inoculated soil indicate that the NER are mainly of biogenic origin (metabolically fixed 14C). Therefore, the applied inoculation approach decreased the risk of persistent non-extractable SMZ residues. Together with our former studies, this specific soil inoculation approach was tested for three substances with different physico-chemical properties, indicating that this soil bioremediation technique might also be used for other substances.

Highlights

  • The veterinary antibiotic Sulfamethazine (SMZ) contaminates soils via manure applications

  • The SMZ mineralization rates remained below 0.2 % days−1 for more than 400 days of incubation

  • Soil Scheyern1 was inoculated with the SMZdegrading microbial community as well as the isolated SMZ-degrading Microbacterium sp. strain C448, both established on carrier particles

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Summary

Introduction

The veterinary antibiotic Sulfamethazine (SMZ) contaminates soils via manure applications. Sulfamethazine (4-Amino-N-(4,6-dimethyl-2-pyrimidinyl) benzenesulfonamide; SMZ) is a veterinary sulfonamide antibiotic used against infections of the respiratory tract, mainly in swine farming [1, 2]. It hampers the production of folic acid in target microbes. Christian et al [9] found SMZ residual concentration both in surface water (7 ng L−1) and soil samples (15 μg kg−1, dry weight) 7 months after a liquid manure application, indicating a high stability of SMZ in soil These non-lethal concentrations can select resistant microorganisms [10, 11] which can potentially transfer resistance to other soil bacteria, including human pathogens, via gene transfer [12,13,14,15,16]

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