Compound- and context-dependent effects of antibiotics on greenhouse gas emissions from livestock

Show full item record



Permalink

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322544

Citation

Danielsson , R , Lucas , J , Dahlberg , J , Ramin , M , Agenas , S , Bayat , A-R , Tapio , I , Hammer , T & Roslin , T 2019 , ' Compound- and context-dependent effects of antibiotics on greenhouse gas emissions from livestock ' , Royal Society Open Science , vol. 6 , no. 10 , 182049 . https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.182049

Title: Compound- and context-dependent effects of antibiotics on greenhouse gas emissions from livestock
Author: Danielsson, Rebecca; Lucas, Jane; Dahlberg, Josef; Ramin, Mohammad; Agenas, Sigrid; Bayat, Ali-Reza; Tapio, Ilma; Hammer, Tobin; Roslin, Tomas
Contributor organization: Research Centre for Ecological Change
Doctoral Programme in Wildlife Biology
Biosciences
Department of Agricultural Sciences
Spatial Foodweb Ecology Group
Date: 2019-10
Language: eng
Number of pages: 20
Belongs to series: Royal Society Open Science
ISSN: 2054-5703
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.182049
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322544
Abstract: The use of antibiotics in livestock production may trigger ecosystem disservices, including increased emissions of greenhouse gases. To evaluate this, we conducted two separate animal experiments, administering two widely used antibiotic compounds (benzylpenicillin and tetracycline) to dairy cows over a 4- or 5-day period locally and/or systemically. We then recorded enteric methane production, total gas production from dung decomposing under aerobic versus anaerobic conditions, prokaryotic community composition in rumen and dung, and accompanying changes in nutrient intake, rumen fermentation, and digestibility resulting from antibiotic administration. The focal antibiotics had no detectable effect on gas emissions from enteric fermentation or dung in aerobic conditions, while they decreased total gas production from anaerobic dung. Microbiome-level effects of benzylpenicillin proved markedly different from those previously recorded for tetracycline in dung, and did not differ by the mode of administration (local or systemic). Antibiotic effects on gas production differed substantially between dung maintained under aerobic versus anaerobic conditions and between compounds. These findings demonstrate compound- and context-dependent impacts of antibiotics on methane emissions and underlying processes, and highlight the need for a global synthesis of data on agricultural antibiotic use before understanding their climatic impacts.
Subject: climate change
livestock production
enteric fermentation
greenhouse gases
methane emissions
antibiotics
METHANE PRODUCTION
ANAEROBIC-DIGESTION
BIOGAS PRODUCTION
DAIRY-COWS
RUMEN
OXYTETRACYCLINE
FERMENTATION
IMPACTS
MANURE
FATE
412 Animal science, dairy science
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


Files in this item

Total number of downloads: Loading...

Files Size Format View
rsos.182049.pdf 1.198Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record