“…However, many other chemicals, natural [e.g., plant-derived (Friedman, 2015)], and xenobiotic [e.g., solvents such as octanol, hexane and toluene (Ramos et al, 2002; Fernandes, 2003)], are also known to select for resistance genes. The prevalence of resistance genes in the environment are the result of a complex combination of factors, that reflect a dynamic balance of fitness costs and benefits: costs of carrying the ARG in the context of the host genome and environment (Maher et al, 2012; Roux et al, 2015); relative to the severity and frequency of hazard (Gullberg et al, 2011, 2014); relative to some physical environmental factors, such as temperature (Gifford et al, 2016) and microbial ecology (Amini et al, 2011), among others.…”