Long-term application of Swedish sewage sludge on farmland does not cause clear changes in the soil bacterial resistome

Show full item record



Permalink

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314495

Citation

Rutgersson , C , Ebmeyer , S , Lassen , S B , Karkman , A , Fick , J , Kristiansson , E , Brandt , K K , Flach , C-F & Larsson , D G J 2020 , ' Long-term application of Swedish sewage sludge on farmland does not cause clear changes in the soil bacterial resistome ' , Environment International , vol. 137 , 105339 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2019.105339

Title: Long-term application of Swedish sewage sludge on farmland does not cause clear changes in the soil bacterial resistome
Author: Rutgersson, Carolin; Ebmeyer, Stefan; Lassen, Simon Bo; Karkman, Antti; Fick, Jerker; Kristiansson, Erik; Brandt, Kristian K.; Flach, Carl-Fredrik; Larsson, D.G. Joakim
Contributor organization: Department of Microbiology
Date: 2020-04
Language: eng
Number of pages: 12
Belongs to series: Environment International
ISSN: 0160-4120
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2019.105339
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314495
Abstract: The widespread practice of applying sewage sludge to arable land makes use of nutrients indispensable for crops and reduces the need for inorganic fertilizer, however this application also provides a potential route for human exposure to chemical contaminants and microbial pathogens in the sludge. A recent concern is that such practice could promote environmental selection and dissemination of antibiotic resistant bacteria or resistance genes. Understanding the risks of sludge amendment in relation to antibiotic resistance development is important for sustainable agriculture, waste treatment and infectious disease management. To assess such risks, we took advantage of an agricultural field trial in southern Sweden, where land used for growing different crops has been amended with sludge every four years since 1981. We sampled raw, semi-digested and digested and stored sludge together with soils from the experimental plots before and two weeks after the most recent amendment in 2017. Levels of selected antimicrobials and bioavailable metals were determined and microbial effects were evaluated using both culture-independent metagenome sequencing and conventional culturing. Antimicrobials or bioavailable metals (Cu and Zn) did not accumulate to levels of concern for environmental selection of antibiotic resistance, and no coherent signs, neither on short or long time scales, of enrichment of antibiotic-resistant bacteria or resistance genes were found in soils amended with digested and stored sewage sludge in doses up to 12 metric tons per hectare. Likewise, only very few and slight differences in microbial community composition were observed after sludge amendment. Taken together, the current study does not indicate risks of sludge amendment related to antibiotic resistance development under the given conditions. Extrapolations should however be done with care as sludge quality and application practices vary between regions. Hence, the antibiotic concentrations and resistance load of the sludge are likely to be higher in regions with larger antibiotic consumption and resistance burden than Sweden.
Subject: 4111 Agronomy
11832 Microbiology and virology
Digested sludge
Antibiotic resistance
Agricultural soil
Metagenome sequencing
Bioavailable metals
Bacterial community composition
BIOAVAILABLE COPPER
TETRACYCLINE RESISTANCE
ESCHERICHIA-COLI
ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANCE GENES
ABUNDANCE
COMMUNITY TOLERANCE
AMENDED SOILS
PSEUDOMONAS-FLUORESCENS
METALS
FIELD TRIAL
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by_nc_nd
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


Files in this item

Total number of downloads: Loading...

Files Size Format View
1_s2.0_S016041201931788X_main.pdf 1.602Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record