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Digestate from Agricultural Biogas Plants as a Reservoir of Antimicrobials and Antibiotic Resistance Genes—Implications for the Environment

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2023 21 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Izabela Wolak, Izabela Wolak, Sylwia Bajkacz, Monika Harnisz, Monika Harnisz, Ewa Korzeniewska, Klaudia Stando, Ewa Korzeniewska Magdalena Męcik, Ewa Korzeniewska, Ewa Korzeniewska Ewa Korzeniewska

Summary

This review examines how antimicrobials and antibiotic resistance genes present in biogas plant feedstocks survive anaerobic digestion and reach agricultural land through digestate fertilizer application, discussing the implications for spread of antimicrobial resistance in soil and water environments.

Body Systems

Antimicrobials and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in substrates processed during anaerobic digestion in agricultural biogas plants (BPs) can reach the digestate (<sub>D</sub>), which is used as fertilizer. Antimicrobials and ARGs can be transferred to agricultural land, which increases their concentrations in the environment. The concentrations of 13 antibiotics in digestate samples from biogas plants (BPs) were investigated in this study. The abundance of ARGs encoding resistance to beta-lactams, tetracyclines, sulfonamides, fluoroquinolones, macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin antibiotics, and the integrase genes were determined in the analyzed samples. The presence of cadmium, lead, nickel, chromium, zinc, and mercury was also examined. Antimicrobials were not eliminated during anaerobic digestion. Their concentrations differed in digestates obtained from different substrates and in liquid and solid fractions (ranging from 62.8 ng/g clarithromycin in the solid fraction of sewage sludge digestate to 1555.9 ng/L doxycycline in the liquid fraction of cattle manure digestate). Digestates obtained from plant-based substrates were characterized by high concentrations of ARGs (ranging from 5.73 × 10<sup>2</sup> copies/g<sub>D</sub><i>cfx</i>A to 2.98 × 10<sup>9</sup> copies/g<sub>D</sub><i>sul</i>1). The samples also contained mercury (0.5 mg/kg dry mass (dm)) and zinc (830 mg/kg dm). The results confirmed that digestate is a reservoir of ARGs (5.73 × 10<sup>2</sup> to 8.89 × 10<sup>10</sup> copies/g<sub>D</sub>) and heavy metals (HMs). In addition, high concentrations of integrase genes (10<sup>5</sup> to 10<sup>7</sup> copies/g<sub>D</sub>) in the samples indicate that mobile genetic elements may be involved in the spread of antibiotic resistance. The study suggested that the risk of soil contamination with antibiotics, HMs, and ARGs is high in farms where digestate is used as fertilizer.

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