Dong, Jianwei et al. published their research in Journal of Environmental Management in 2021 |CAS: 144-80-9

The Article related to antibiotics aqua agricultural catchment rainfall events, agriculture, diffuse pollution, emerging contaminants, nutrients, suspended particles, Water: Analysis and other aspects.Product Details of 144-80-9

On September 1, 2021, Dong, Jianwei; Xie, Hui; Feng, Ranran; Lai, Xijun; Duan, Hongtao; Xu, Ligang; Xia, Xinghui published an article.Product Details of 144-80-9 The title of the article was Transport and fate of antibiotics in a typical aqua-agricultural catchment explained by rainfall events: Implications for catchment management. And the article contained the following:

Antibiotics receive many concerns since their neg. environmental impacts are being revealed, especially in aqua-agricultural areas. Rainfall events are responsible for transferring excess contaminants to receiving waters. However, the understanding of antibiotics transport and fate responding to rainfall events was constrained by limited event-based data and lacking integrated consideration of dissolved and particulate forms. We developed an intensive monitoring strategy to capture responses of fourteen antibiotics to different types of rainfall events and inter-event low flow periods. Pollutant-rich suspended particles, as high as 1471 ng/g, were found in low flow periods while the very heavy rainfall events and consecutive rainfall events stimulated the release of antibiotics from eroded soil particles to river water. Therefore, these rainfall events drove radical increase of dissolved antibiotic concentration up to 592 ng/L and total flux up to 25.0 g/d. Sulfonamides were particularly sensitive to rainfall events because of their residues in manure-applied agricultural lands. Transport dynamics of most antibiotics were accretion whereas only clarithromycin exhibited a dilution pattern by concentration-discharge relationships. Aquaculture ponds were inferred to significantly contribute tetracycline, oxytetracycline, and clarithromycin. Conventional contaminants were compared to discriminate potential sources of antibiotics and imply effective catchment management. The results provided novel insights into event-based drivers and dynamics of antibiotics and could lead to appropriate management strategy. The experimental process involved the reaction of N-((4-Aminophenyl)sulfonyl)acetamide(cas: 144-80-9).Product Details of 144-80-9

The Article related to antibiotics aqua agricultural catchment rainfall events, agriculture, diffuse pollution, emerging contaminants, nutrients, suspended particles, Water: Analysis and other aspects.Product Details of 144-80-9

Referemce:
Amide – Wikipedia,
Amide – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics