• Title of article

    Ingestion of sludge applied organic chemicals by animals

  • Author/Authors

    George F. Fries، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    93
  • To page
    108
  • Abstract
    Intake of sludge-borne chemicals is related to the crop and animal management systems, the species and physiological status of animals, and the properties of the chemicals. The greatest intake occurs when sludge is applied to established crops and animals have immediate access. Intake is reduced when access is delayed to allow losses by weathering and dilution by plant growth, or when sludge is incorporated into soil because vapour transport from soil to plants and lower concentrations at the surface reduce intake via soil ingestion. Animals that consume lorage are the most subject to contaminant exposure, which is maximized when pasture is the major component of the diet because soil ingestion is an additional exposure pathway. Of the many organic contaminants in sludges, only lipophilic halogenated hydrocarbons accumulate in animal tissues and products. Compounds like phthalate esters, PAHs, acid phenolics, nitrosamines, volatile aromatics, and aromatic surfactants are metabolized and do not accumulate. Among halogenated hydrocarbons, compounds with low degrees of halogenation are metabolized and do not accumulate, but higher degrees of halogenation block metabolism, and concentrations in milk and tissue fat may be several-fold greater than in the diets.
  • Keywords
    Forage , animal uptake , Organic contaminants , Sludge-borne chemicals , Soil ingestion , Bioavailability
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Serial Year
    1996
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Record number

    979949