Environmental Fate of Roxarsone in
Poultry Litter. Part II. Mobility of
Arsenic in Soils Amended with
Poultry Litter
Posted on 2003-03-18 - 00:00
Poultry litter often contains arsenic as a result of
organo-arsenical feed additives. When the poultry litter is
applied to agricultural fields, the arsenic is released to
the environment and may result in increased arsenic in
surface and groundwater and increased uptake by plants.
The release of arsenic from poultry litter, litter-amended
soils, and soils without litter amendment was examined by
extraction with water and strong acids (HCl and HNO3).
The extracts were analyzed for As, C, P, Cu, Zn, and Fe.
Copper, zinc, and iron are also poultry feed additives. Soils
with a known history of litter application and controlled
application rate of arsenic-containing poultry litter were
obtained from the University of Maryland Agricultural
Experiment Station. Soils from fields with long-term application
of poultry litter were obtained from a tilled field on the
Delmarva Peninsula (MD) and an untilled Oklahoma pasture.
Samples from an adjacent forest or nearby pasture that
had no history of litter application were used as controls.
Depth profiles were sampled for the Oklahoma pasture
soils. Analysis of the poultry litter showed that 75% of the
arsenic was readily soluble in water. Extraction of soils
shows that weakly bound arsenic mobilized by water
correlates positively with C, P, Cu, and Zn in amended
fields and appears to come primarily from the litter. Strongly
bound arsenic correlates positively with Fe in amended
fields and suggests sorption or coprecipitation of As and
Fe in the soil column.
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Rutherford, D. W.; Bednar, A. J.; Garbarino, J. R.; Needham, R.; Staver, K. W.; Wershaw, R. L. (2016). Environmental Fate of Roxarsone in
Poultry Litter. Part II. Mobility of
Arsenic in Soils Amended with
Poultry Litter. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es026222+