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Veterinary antibiotic residues in surface runoff flowing through vegetative buffer strip plots located at the University of Missouri Bradford Research and Extension Center (Columbia, MO) in September 2020

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2020-09-01
Time Period
2020-09-03
Time Period
2020-09-08
Time Period
2020-09-10
Time Period
2020-09-15
Time Period
2020-09-17

Citation

Moody, A.H. and Lerch, R.N., 2023, Veterinary antibiotic residues in surface runoff flowing through vegetative buffer strip plots located at the University of Missouri Bradford Research and Extension Center (Columbia, MO) in September 2020: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9FIX717.

Summary

Vegetative buffer strips have been demonstrated to effectively reduce loads of sediment, nutrients, and herbicides in surface runoff, but their effectiveness for reducing veterinary antibiotic loads in runoff has not been well documented. Surface runoff simulation where performed to determine the effectiveness of Vegetative buffer strips vegetation and width on surface runoff loads of the veterinary antibiotics sulfamethazine and lincomycin. The three datasets in this release document 1. physical and chemical soil properties for soil located on experimental vegetated buffer strip plots prior to surface runoff simulations; 2. Rainfall simulator performance data and antecedent soil water content data for all vegetated buffer strip plots [...]

Contacts

Point of Contact :
Adam H Moody
Originator :
Adam H Moody, Robert Lerch
Metadata Contact :
CERC Data Managers
Publisher :
U.S. Geological Survey
Data Owner :
Columbia Environmental Research Center
Distributor :
U.S. Geological Survey - ScienceBase
SDC Data Owner :
Columbia Environmental Research Center
USGS Mission Area :
Ecosystems

Attached Files

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Rain_Sim.txt 449 Bytes text/plain
VBS_Hydrology_Data.txt 5.56 KB text/plain
VBS_Soil_Properties.txt 581 Bytes text/plain

Purpose

This study which resulted in these data was designed to evaluate the ability of vegetated buffer strips to act as barriers to residues of the veterinary antibiotics sulfamethazine and lincomycin present in surface runoff. The effectiveness of vegetated buffer strips for mitigating the transport of veterinary antibiotics on high runoff potential soils has not been well studied and is fundamental in the design of mitigation strategies to reduce their environmental exposure.

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Communities

  • Columbia Environmental Research Center (CERC)
  • USGS Data Release Products

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Provenance

Entered directly

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9FIX717

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