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Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B
Pesticides, Food Contaminants, and Agricultural Wastes
Volume 52, 2017 - Issue 11
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Original Articles

Environmental transport of endogenous dairy manure estrogens

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Pages 817-822 | Received 12 Apr 2017, Accepted 28 Jun 2017, Published online: 22 Sep 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Although estrogens originating from dairy manure applied to agricultural soils as a fertilizer can potentially contaminate surface water and groundwater, the variables that control transport are poorly understood. Our objective was to assess the potential for off-site movement of endogenous dairy cattle estrogens when manure is applied on fields at agronomically relevant fertilization rates. Estrone (E1), 17α-estradiol (α-E2), and 17β-estradiol (β-E2) were used in laboratory sorption, desorption, and transformation incubations with both manure and an agriculturally relevant soil. Sorption on manure containing 44% organic carbon exceeded sorption on soil containing 0.8% organic carbon by 20 to 150 times, following the pattern of β-E2 > α-E2 > E1. Approximately 20% of E1 and 17% of α-E2 were desorbed from manure, whereas only about 4% of β-E2 was desorbed. Thirty to seventy percent of α-E2 and β-E2 were converted to E1 in soil and manure, making it imperative that transformation reactions be considered when predicting transport and potential biological effects in the environment. Overall results indicate that high organic carbon concentrations and relatively low amounts of desorption inhibit the potential for off-site transport of endogenous dairy manure estrogens.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Jennifer Chan for help with sample preparation and Annie Pollard for reviewing the manuscript and providing valuable comments. Special thanks to April Leytem and Amber Moore for access to the fields for soil collection.

Funding

This project was supported by the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative competitive grant 2013-67019-21375 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

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