5 results on '"Bai, Cuihua"'
Search Results
2. Effect of roxarsone metabolites in chicken manure on soil biological property.
- Author
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Yao, Lixian, Huang, Lianxi, Bai, Cuihua, Zhou, Changmin, and He, Zhaohuan
- Subjects
ROXARSONE ,POULTRY manure ,ORGANOARSENIC compounds ,CACODYLIC acid ,ACID phosphatase - Abstract
Abstract Roxarsone (ROX), an organoarsenic feed additive, occurs as itself and its metabolites including As(V), As(III), monomethylarsonic acid (MMA) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) in animal manure. Animal manure improves soil biological property, whereas As compounds impact microorganisms. The integral influence of animal manure bearing ROX metabolites on soil biological quality is not clear yet. Herein, the effect of four chicken manures excreted by chickens fed with four diets containing 0, 40, 80 and 120 mg ROX kg
−1 , on soil biological attributes. ROX addition in chicken diets increased total As and ROX metabolites in manures, but decreased manure total N, ammonium and nitrate. The elevated ROX metabolites in manures increased soil total As, As species and total N, and increased first and then decreased soil nitrate and nitrite, but did not affect soil ammonium in manure-applied soils. The promoting role of both soil As(III) and ammonium on soil microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen, respiration and saccharase activity, were exceeded or balanced by the inhibiting effect of soil nitrate. The suppression of soil catalase activity by soil As(V) was surpassed by the enhancement caused by soil nitrate and nitrite. Soil urease, acid phosphatase and polyphenol oxidase activities were not suitable bioindicators in the four manure-amended soils. Soil DMA did not affect soil biological properties, and MMA was not detectable in all manure-amended soils. The above highlights the complexity of joint influence of soil As and N on biological attributes. Totally, when ROX is used at allowable dose in chicken diet, soil biological quality would be suppressed in manure-amended soil. Graphical abstract fx1 Highlights • Roxarsone use in chicken diet increases As but decreases N in chicken manure. • Roxarsone metabolites in manure increases soil total As and As species. • Roxarsone metabolites affect soil total N and inorganic N in manure-applied soil. • Role of soil As species on biological property counteracts impact of soil N forms. • Soil As and N jointly govern soil biological attribute in manure-applied soil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Soil calcium significantly promotes uptake of inorganic arsenic by garland chrysanthemum ( ChrysanthemumL coronarium) fertilized with chicken manure bearing roxarsone and its metabolites.
- Author
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Yao, Lixian, Huang, Lianxi, Bai, Cuihua, He, Zhaohuan, and Zhou, Changmin
- Subjects
CALCIUM in soils ,MANURES ,ROXARSONE ,CHRYSANTHEMUMS ,METABOLITES ,FERTILIZERS - Abstract
Roxarsone (ROX), a widely used feed organoarsenic additive, occurs as itself and its metabolites in animal manure that is commonly land used as fertilizer. Soil property impacts arsenic (As) speciation and bioavailability. Fourteen soils across China were used to conduct culture experiments to investigate As uptake by garland chrysanthemum ( ChrysanthemumL coronarium), with the soils fertilized with chicken manure bearing ROX and its metabolites. The results show As(III) was the sole As form in garland chrysanthemum shoots, and As(III) and As(V) occurred in roots. Only inorganic As was detected in all soils when the plants were harvested. Stepwise regression analysis shows soil-exchangeable Ca predominated shoot As(III) concentration (shoot As(III) = 1.60030 soil Ca, R = 0.8832***). Therefore, ROX is transferred into the human food chain finally as inorganic As in plants. Application of animal manure bearing ROX and its metabolites is not recommended in Ca-rich soils to avoid excess inorganic As dietary exposure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Soil attribute regulates assimilation of roxarsone metabolites by rice (Oryza sativa L.).
- Author
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Yao, Lixian, Carey, Manus P., Zhong, Jiawen, Bai, Cuihua, Zhou, Changmin, and Meharg, Andrew A.
- Subjects
BROWN rice ,FEED additives ,RICE ,POULTRY manure ,RICE hulls ,METABOLITES ,SOILS ,MANURES - Abstract
Roxarsone (ROX), an organoarsenic feed additive, and its metabolites, can be present in animal manure used to fertilize rice. Rice is prone to absorb arsenic, and is subject to straighthead disorder, which reduces rice yield and is linked with organic arsenic compounds. This study aims to elucidate how soil property affect arsenic accumulation in rice plants fertilized with chicken manure containing ROX metabolites. Manures of chickens fed without or with ROX, designated as control manure and ROX treated manure (ROXCM), respectively, were applied in eight paddy soils of different origins, to investigate the assimilation of arsenic species in rice plants. The results show that inorganic arsenic (arsenate and arsenite), monomethylarsonic acid and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) were detected in all brown rice and husk, trace tetramethylarsonium and trimethylarsine oxide were occasionally found in these both parts, whereas all these arsenic species were determined in straw, irrespective of manure type. ROXCM application specifically and significantly increased brown rice DMA (P = 0.002), which remarkably enhanced the risk of straighthead disease in rice. Although soil total As impacted grain biomass, soil free-iron oxides and pH dominated arsenic accumulation by rice plants. The significantly increased grain DMA suggests manure bearing ROX metabolites is not suitable to be used in soils with abundant free-iron oxides and/or high pH, if straighthead disorder is to be avoided in rice. • ROX metabolites significantly enhance grain DMA and thus raise grain total As. • ROX metabolites do not affect total As and As species in rice straw and husk. • Soil free-Fe oxides or pH dominates uptake of ROX metabolites by rice plant. • Animal manure with ROX metabolites should not be used in soils with high Fe or pH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Delivery of roxarsone via chicken diet → chicken → chicken manure → soil → rice plant.
- Author
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Yao, Lixian, Huang, Lianxi, He, Zhaohuan, Zhou, Changmin, Lu, Weisheng, and Bai, Cuihua
- Subjects
- *
ROXARSONE , *PLANTING , *RICE , *FEED additives , *REGRESSION analysis , *FOOD chains , *CACODYLIC acid - Abstract
Roxarsone (ROX), a widely used feed additive, occurs as itself and its metabolites in animal manure. Rice is prone to accumulate As than other staple food. Four diets with 0, 40, 80 and 120 mg ROX kg − 1 were fed in chickens, and four chicken manures (CMs) were collected to fertilize rice plants in a soil culture experiment. Linear regression analysis shows that the slopes of As species including 4-hydroxy-phenylarsonic acid, As(V), As(III), monomethylarsonic acid (MMA) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) in CM versus dietary ROX were 0.033, 0.314, 0.033, 0.054 and 0.138, respectively. Both As(III) and DMA were determined in all rice grains, and As(III), As(V), MMA and DMA in rice hull, but detectable As forms in rice straws and soils increased with increasing ROX dose. Grain As(III) was unrelated to ROX dose but exceeded the Chinese rice As limit (0.15 mg As(III) kg − 1 ). Dietary ROX enhanced straw As(III) mostly, with the slope of 0.020, followed by hull DMA (0.006) and grain DMA (0.002). The slopes of soil As(V) and As(III) were 0.003 and 0.001. This is the first report illustrating the quantitative delivery of ROX via food chain, which helps to evaluate health and environmental risks caused by ROX use in animal production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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