Antimicrobial resistant bacteria in wastewater-irrigated Mexican soils and transfer of resistant bacteria from irrigated soils to cilantro plants

Abstract

Agricultural fields in the Mezquital Valley, Mexico, were irrigated with untreated wastewater over several decades. Following the construction of a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Atotonilco de Tula, WWTP effluent is used for irrigation. To evaluate the effects of changed irrigation, a soil incubation experiment was performed. Soils of the Mezquital Valley long-term irrigated with untreated wastewater were irrigated with WWTP influent or effluent, both unspiked and spiked with antibiotics and biocidal compounds and incubated four weeks. We investigated the effects of shifted irrigation on the abundance of cultivable total heterotrophic and resistant bacteria (RB). Additionally, RB were cultivated from Coriandrum sativum (cilantro) sown in soil of the incubation experiment. While wastewater treatment significantly reduced the bacterial abundance in effluent, spiking increased RB abundance in both wastewater types including ciprofloxacin (CIP) RB. Before wastewater addition, all soils contained cultivable RB. Irrigation increased the relative abundance of RB cultivated on Mueller Hinton (MH) agar in Leptosols and Phaeozems, compared to soils prior to wastewater addition irrespective of the water type, but not in Vertisols, suggesting the soil type rather than water qualities influenced the RB abundance. Diverse CIP RB were cultivated from leaves and roots of cilantro including strains of 14 genera of three phyla. Among these, Achromobacter strains closely related to the potentially pathogenic A. spanius were abundant in both leaves and roots. Our results showed that the implementation of wastewater treatment does not reduce the abundance of cultivable RB in Mezquital Valley soils and cilantro plants. Health risk associated monitoring should include long-term persistent RB colonizing plants cultivated in wastewater irrigated soils.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Feb 2026
Accepted
09 Jun 2026
First published
11 Jun 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Environ. Sci.: Adv., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Antimicrobial resistant bacteria in wastewater-irrigated Mexican soils and transfer of resistant bacteria from irrigated soils to cilantro plants

D. Pulami, D. Bhati, S. Gallego, K. Smalla, K. Lüneberg, C. Siebe, B. Heyde, J. Siemens and S. P. P. Glaeser, Environ. Sci.: Adv., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6VA00055J

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