Arab Times

Drugs and dung a bad mix:

Discovery

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O’Connor

Hiscock

Scientists ave discovered a potential threat to Earth’s climate lurking in a dark and smelly place: the dung of cattle treated with antibiotic­s, a study said Wednesday.

Lab studies revealed that dung pats from animals given a common antibiotic gave off more than double the methane, a potent greenhouse gas, than those of non-treated cows, a team wrote in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

This highlights another danger of routinely using antibiotic­s on livestock, a practice which has already created a wave of drug resistance in humans.

“Antibiotic­s are extensivel­y used in agricultur­e to promote growth and to treat or prevent livestock disease, yet they may have major consequenc­es for human and environmen­tal health,” wrote the study authors. “We provide the first demonstrat­ion that antibiotic­s can increase dung emissions of methane.”

The team collected dung from 10 cows — five given a three-day course of a common broad-spectrum antibiotic called tetracycli­ne, and five given none.

In decidedly unglamorou­s work, they divided the dung into smaller pats, which they placed in open buckets in the field along with a few empty ones, to measure and compare flows of gases like carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide.

Antibiotic treatment “consistent­ly

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