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375943

Detection of the Toxic Effects of the Antibiotic Florfenicol by Seed Germination Test

Article

Last updated: 01 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Soils and Human Health

Abstract

Over 60,000 tons of veterinary antibiotics are used globally annually, with an anticipated increase to 67% by 2030. Veterinary medication residues can enter the environment through fertilizer application in agricultural areas, potentially leading to plant toxicity. In the current study, the veterinary antibiotic florfenicol was tested in two ways: first, in Petri dishes during cultivation, and second, by adding the antibiotic to the soil using germination trays. Various antibiotic concentrations were applied (0.005%, 0.01%, 0.02%, and 0.04% v/v, ml/L). Results from the first experiment exhibited notable differences in germination rates after 8 days, in shoot and root length, and fresh and dry seedling weights, with these traits declining as concentrations increased compared to the control group. The second experiment demonstrated significant differences in germination rates after 8 days, along with changes in shoot and root length, fresh and dry seedling weights, and leaf count, with most traits decreasing as concentrations increased except for root length, which notably decreased at the 0.04% concentration. Changes in root structure, including the disappearance of fibrous roots and reduction in root system length, were observed. Germination rates after 4 days showed no significant difference in either experiment. The findings suggest that florfenicol concentrations in the first experiment affected the germination and growth of yellow corn (Zea mays L) plants, starting from the lowest concentration of 0.005%. In the second experiment, using organic-rich soil mitigated the toxic effects of florfenicol at low concentrations, except for the highest concentration of 0.04%. Florfenicol did not cause damage to chloroplasts, as the seedlings recovered their usual appearance.

DOI

10.21608/ejss.2024.303092.1813

Keywords

environment, Risk, Veterinary antibiotics, residues, plants

Authors

First Name

Nahla

Last Name

Hammok

MiddleName

salim

Affiliation

Environmental Research Center, University of Mosul, Iraq

Email

hammok2019@uomosul.edu.com

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

64

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

49165

Issue Date

2024-12-01

Receive Date

2024-07-15

Publish Date

2024-12-01

Page Start

1,449

Page End

1,456

Print ISSN

0302-6701

Online ISSN

2357-0369

Link

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/article_375943.html

Detail API

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=375943

Order

9

Type

Original Article

Type Code

19

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Soil Science

Publication Link

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Detection of the Toxic Effects of the Antibiotic Florfenicol by Seed Germination Test

Details

Type

Article

Created At

23 Dec 2024