Antibiotic ecotoxicity and resistance risks in resource-constrained chicken and pig farming environments

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Date Issued

Date Online

2024-12-30

Language

en

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Peer Review

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Open Access Open Access

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CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

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Citation

Gudda, F., Muloi, D., Nganga, F., Nolari, C., Gao, Y. and Moodley, A. 2024. Antibiotic ecotoxicity and resistance risks in resource-constrained chicken and pig farming environments. npj Antimicrobials and Resistance 2: 51.

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Abstract/Description

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) data from agroecosystems in low- and middle-income countries is limited. We surveyed chicken (n = 52) and pig (n = 47) farms in Kenya to understand AMR in animal-environment pathways. Using LC-MS/MS, we validated the methods for analyzing eight common antibiotics and quantified the associated risks. Chicken compost (25.8%, n = 97/376) had the highest antibiotics prevalence, followed by pig manure-fertilized soils (23.1%, n = 83/360). The average antibiotic concentration was 63.4 µg/kg, which is below the environmentally relevant threshold (100 µg/kg), except for trimethoprim (221.4 µg/kg) among antibiotics and pig manure-fertilized soils (129.3 µg/kg) across sample types. Similarly, the average AMR risk quotient (RQ) was low (RQ < 0.1), except for trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole (RQ ≥ 1). Ecotoxicity and AMR risks increased with flock size and the number of antibiotics used by pigs. Continuous environmental monitoring and large-scale studies on antibiotic contamination are crucial for evidence-based pollution control and the effective mitigation of environmental AMR.

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