Conversion of swine manure into biochar for soil amendment: Efficacy and underlying mechanism of dissipating antibiotic resistance genes

جدول المحتويات
تاريخ النشر

Abstract

Livestock manure amendment, a common fertilization method for agricultural practice, can exacerbate antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) pollution, thus threatening food safety and human health. On the other hand, manure can also be produced as biochar to improve soil quality, which may reduce ARGs inside manure. However, it is unclear how and why shifting manure to biochar for soil amendment reduces ARG pollution. Thus, this study investigated the variations of ARGs and microbial communities in soil amended with swine manure (2 % and 5 %) and its biochar (2 % and 5 %) and then explored how shifting swine manure to biochar reduced ARG contamination. After 28 d incubation, ARG number in soil without amendment, manure-amended soils, and biochar-amended soils were 47, 112–136, and 43–52, respectively. ARG abundance in soil without amendment, manure-amended soils, and biochar-amended soils were 7.66 × 107, 4.32 × 109 – 1.42 × 1011, and 8.44 × 107–9.67 × 107 copies g−1 dry soil, respectively.

Compared to manure-amended soils, its biochar amendments reduced ARG abundance by 2–4 orders of magnitude and ARG number by 70–93 in soil. Besides, manure amendment altered while biochar did not alter bacterial diversity and composition. The changed soil properties and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) could explain the changes in ARGs. Relative to manure amendments, its biochar amendments reduced mobile genetic elements (MGEs), Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes in soil, which explained the reduced abundance and diversity of ARGs; however, the multidrug-resistance genes harbored in Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes were still abundant in biochar-amended soil. This study suggests that converting manure to biochar as a soil amendment can help control the spread of manure ARGs.