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Recovery and reactions of amprolium from poultry manure added to soil
Authors:PR Warman  RL Thomas  CT Corke  ET Moran
Institution:1. Department of Land Resource Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G 2W1;2. Department of Environmental Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G 2W1;3. Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G 2W1
Abstract:Amprolium, a coccidiostat added to poultry feed, occurs in excreta at concentrations of 204 μ g?1 and investigations were made of the effect of this quantity of amprolium on the biochemistry of soil to which manure had been applied.Greenhouse experiments showed that 0.8 μg g?1 amprolium was found in soil pots 80 days after treatment with manure at the equivalent of 56.1 t ha?1 and was detectable 20 days following treatment at the equivalent of 11.2 t ha?1.Laboratory experiments indicated that amprolium was differentially adsorbed to two complexing media, soil and manure. Since amprolium was a constituent of treated manure, it was expected that the amprolium manure-soil system would offer various sites for adsorption of amprolium. Mixing amprolium with soil and with soil plus untreated manure yielded approximately the same effect on amprolium adsorption based on recoveries in water solution, and as methanol extractable. However, total recovery of amprolium from treated manure added to soil was only a fraction of the above, indicating the high complexing capacity of the manure.No effect on soil respiration was observed by either pure amprolium or amprolium as a constituent of treated manure. The higher rate of manure application caused greater respiration due to the presence of more readily oxidizable organic matter, but the respiration pattern attributed to the manure component was not unlike the respiration pattern of the Guelph loam soil.
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