Abstract

Semicarbazide (SEM), a marker residue used to monitor the use of prohibited drug nitrofurazone (NFZ), is commonly found in wild crustaceans, implying the natural origin. However, the difference between endogenous and exogenous SEM has rarely been investigated. So, tissue-bound SEM was determined in samples collected from giant river prawns cultured in an aquaculture farm and in samples from an experiment where giant river prawns were fed twice a day with NFZ at 30 mg/kg for 5 days. At day 10 of drug withdrawal, muscle SEM of the NFZ-fed prawn was 17.78 ng/g and depleted to 1.18 ng/g at day 90 (half-life 20.31 days) which was significantly higher than the control prawn (usually ≤ 0.1 ng/g). In contrast, the average SEM in the shell was independent of NFZ treatment. SEM was not found in the aquaculture farm samples, implying that the SEM in cultured prawn did not originate from SEM contamination.

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