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Assessment of Drinking Water and Wastewater Quality in Selected Dairy Cattle Farms from Malaysia
2022
Faez Firdaus Abdullah Jesse | Nagachandra Rao Gopi Naidu | Wan Lutfi Wan Johari | Eric Lim Teik Chung | Bura Paul Thlama | Mohd Azmi Mohd Lila | Abd Wahid Haron
There is a paucity of published research information on the quality of water used in the Malaysian ruminant livestock production system. Also, there are growing concerns about the sanitation standards of ruminant farms as it affects the management of wastewater in Malaysia. This study was designed to compile preliminary data on the drinking water and wastewater quality in designated dairy cattle farms in the Klang Valley. Seven dairy farms were randomly selected and visited to collect samples of drinking and wastewater for laboratory analysis. The water samples were analyzed to determine dissolved oxygen (DO), pH, salinity, electrical conductivity, turbidity, biological oxygen demand (BOD), chemical oxygen demand (COD), total suspended solids (TSS), total dissolved solids (TDS), ammoniacal nitrogen, nitrate, phosphates, total coliform count, iron, and magnesium content. The means of various parameters were compared with the National Water Quality Standards (NWQS) to determine the appropriate classification. We further streamlined the rating of water quality into three broad categories, namely, good (Class I and II), moderate (Class III) and unsatisfactory (Class IV and V). Analysis of drinking water revealed 1(14.29%), 2 (28.57%), 2 (28.57%) and 2 (28.57%) farms were categorized as Class II, III, IV and V, respectively. Meanwhile, all the wastewater samples analyzed in this study were classified as Class V. This study provides preliminary data on the quality of drinking and wastewater in select dairy cattle farms in Malaysia. The obtained findings indicate that the quality of drinking water in most of the cattle farms is below the National Water Quality Standards.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Cytotoxicity Screening of Anionic Dye Removal by Bio-Natural Adsorbent: Egg Shell and Peanut Shell
2021
Parichat Srisamai | Prakaipet Pankaew | Poonnawis Sudtikoonaseth | Niwat Kangwanrangsan | Siriluck Iamtham | Wannee Jiraungkoorskul
Synthetic dye is produced by chemical compound that can be harmful to living microorganisms and human. Textile dye industry is inadequate dye effluent to the environment that can lead to water pollution. Therefore, the releasing dye effluent should be minimized. Eggshell and peanut shell adsorbent are recycled from solid agro-waste and household food waste. They are wildly used in adsorption process to dye effluent before releasing into natural water bodies. However, the toxic reduction of dye after dye removal is unknown. The aim of this study was to investigate the toxicity of eosin dye and its removal by adsorbent. Moreover, the cytotoxicity of dye is evaluated by brine shrimp lethality bioassay. The results showed that the dye after removal by eggshell had the lower mortality rate when compared to those of eosin dye and penut shell adsorption. The histopathological lesions such as abnormal appearance of enterocyte, blebing cell and coagulation necrosis were found. Therefore, these bio-natural adsorbents might be the alternative substances for the adsorption process in wastewater treatment and they might decrease the toxicity of dye pollution.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Metagenomic analysis of acquired antibiotic resistance determinants in the gut microbiota of wild boars (Sus scrofa) – preliminary results
2020
Libisch, Balázs | Keresztény, Tibor | Kerényi, Zoltán | Kocsis, Róbert | Sipos, Rita | Papp, Péter P. | Olasz, Ferenc
Land application of manure that contains antibiotics and resistant bacteria may facilitate the establishment of an environmental reservoir of antibiotic-resistant microbes, promoting their dissemination into agricultural and natural habitats. The main objective of this study was to search for acquired antibiotic resistance determinants in the gut microbiota of wild boar populations living in natural habitats. Gastrointestinal samples of free-living wild boars were collected in the Zemplén Mountains in Hungary and were characterised by culture-based, metagenomic, and molecular microbiological methods. Bioinformatic analysis of the faecal microbiome of a hunted wild boar from Japan was used for comparative studies. Also, shotgun metagenomic sequencing data of two untreated sewage wastewater samples from North Pest (Hungary) from 2016 were analysed by bioinformatic methods. Minimum spanning tree diagrams for seven-gene MLST profiles of 104 E. coli strains isolated in Europe from wild boars and domestic pigs were generated in Enterobase. In the ileum of a diarrhoeic boar, a dominant E. coli O112ab:H2 strain with intermediate resistance to gentamicin, tobramycin, and amikacin was identified, displaying sequence type ST388 and harbouring the EAST1 toxin astA gene. Metagenomic analyses of the colon and rectum digesta revealed the presence of the tetQ, tetW, tetO, and mefA antibiotic resistance genes that were also detected in the gut microbiome of four other wild boars from the mountains. Furthermore, the tetQ and cfxA genes were identified in the faecal microbiome of a hunted wild boar from Japan. The gastrointestinal microbiota of the free-living wild boars examined in this study carried acquired antibiotic resistance determinants that are highly prevalent among domestic livestock populations.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth in soil irrigated with wastewater in Sharkia Governorate, Egypt with a reference to the seasonal variation
2024
Abd Allah A. Al Hoot | Samia E. Etewa | Salwa Z. Arafa | Suzan I. Rashad
The objective of this study was to assess the extent of parasitological contamination of soil irrigated with wastewater. Samples were randomly collected including soil, and water samples from which soils were watered. Samples were taken from different locations in Sharkia governorate, in the east of Nile Delta, Egypt. Such locations were irrigated from water canals, namely El-Ganabia, Sherwida, El-mahmodyia, El-Senety, and Saft Zerek. The samples were collected monthly during September 2021 to September 2022. More than half of the collected samples (60.7%) tested significantly positive for parasite contamination. The largest proportion of pollution was found in areas near the El-Senety Canal with a rate of infection (80%), whereas soil samples near the Moias Canal area had significantly the lowest (40%). 40.8% of positive samples had one parasite species, whereas 37.9% and 11.5% of positive samples were infected with parasites.
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