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Stacking Time and Aluminum Sulfate Effects on Polyether Ionophores in Broiler Litter
Author(s) -
Doydora Sarah A.,
Sun Peizhe,
Cabrera Miguel,
Thompson Aaron,
LoveMyers Kimberly,
Rema John,
Calvert Vaughn,
Pavlostathis Spyros G.,
Huang ChingHua
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of environmental quality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.888
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1537-2537
pISSN - 0047-2425
DOI - 10.2134/jeq2015.03.0156
Subject(s) - broiler , salinomycin , monensin , alum , litter , lasalocid , chemistry , zoology , poultry litter , ionophore , food science , agronomy , biochemistry , biology , nutrient , organic chemistry , membrane , antibiotics
The use of ionophores as antiparasitic drugs plays an important role in US poultry production, especially in the broiler ( Gallus gallus domesticus ) industry. However, administered ionophores can pass through the bird's digestive system and appear in broiler litter, which, when applied to agricultural fields, can present an environmental hazard. Stacking (storing or stockpiling) broiler litter for some time might decrease the litter ionophore concentrations before land application. Because ionophores undergo abiotic hydrolysis at low pH, decreasing litter pH with acidic aluminum sulfate (alum) might also decrease ionophore concentrations. We assessed the change in ionophore concentrations in broiler litter in response to the length of time broiler litter was stored (stacking time) and alum addition. We spiked broiler litter with monensin and salinomycin, placed alum‐amended litter (∼pH 4–5) and unamended litter (∼pH 8–9) into 1.8‐m 3 bins, and repeatedly sampled each bin for 112 d. Our findings showed that stacking broiler litter alone did not have an impact on monensin concentration, but it did slowly reduce salinomycin concentration by 55%. Adding alum to broiler litter reduced monensin concentration by approximately 20% relative to unamended litter, but it did not change salinomycin concentration. These results call for continued search for alternative strategies that could potentially reduce the concentration of ionophores in broiler litter before their application to agricultural soils. Core Ideas Ionophores are present in broiler litter and may contaminate surface waters. Stacking broiler litter for 112 d reduced salinomycin but not monensin concentrations. Alum decreased monensin but not salinomycin concentrations in broiler litter. Monensin could persist longer than salinomycin in stacked broiler litter.