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  • Title: Effects of Chinese medicine herbal residues on antibiotic resistance genes and the bacterial community in chicken manure composting.
    Author: Guo BB, Wu JP, Chen JW, Zhang H, Li JJ.
    Journal: J Antibiot (Tokyo); 2022 Mar; 75(3):164-171. PubMed ID: 35058576.
    Abstract:
    The use of livestock manure is an important way for antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) to enter the environment, and composting is an effective method for removing ARGs from livestock manure. In this study, different volume ratios of Chinese medicinal herbal residues (CMHRs) were added to laboratory-scale chicken manure composting to evaluate their effects, if any, on the behavior of ARGs, mobile genetic elements (MGEs), and the bacterial community. At the end of the composting period, the composition of the microbial community changed. Firmicutes decreased and Bacteroidetes increased. The most striking effect was that the relative abundance of the 21 ARGs and 5 MGEs detected decreased by varying degrees in the different treatments (except for sulI and intI1). The removal rate of the ARGs increased with the increased addition of CMHRs. The correlations between transferase genes (tnpA and tnpA-02) and ARGs were significant (p < 0.05); therefore, transposons play an important role in the horizontal gene transfer of ARGs in chicken manure. The results imply that CMHRs would be an effective bulking agent for the removal of ARGs from chicken manure composting.
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