Concentration/time-dependent dissipation, partitioning and plant accumulation of hazardous current-used pesticides and 2-hydroxyatrazine in sand and soil
Jazyk angličtina Země Anglie, Velká Británie Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
29621678
DOI
10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.03.177
PII: S0045-6535(18)30604-0
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- 2-Hydroxyatrazine, Current-used pesticides, Degradation, Plant uptake, Soil, Solid-phase microextraction,
- MeSH
- atrazin analogy a deriváty analýza farmakokinetika MeSH
- kořeny rostlin metabolismus MeSH
- látky znečišťující půdu analýza MeSH
- listy rostlin metabolismus MeSH
- pesticidy analýza farmakokinetika MeSH
- průmyslové fungicidy analýza farmakokinetika MeSH
- salát (hlávkový) metabolismus MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- 2-hydroxyatrazine MeSH Prohlížeč
- atrazin MeSH
- látky znečišťující půdu MeSH
- pesticidy MeSH
- průmyslové fungicidy MeSH
The dissipation, partitioning dynamics and biouptake was measured for selected hazardous current-used pesticides (conazole fungicides: epoxiconazole, flusilazole, tebuconazole; prochloraz, chlorpyrifos, pendimethalin) and for a transformation product (2-hydroxyatrazine) in agricultural soil and quartz sand as representatives of a real and a worst-case scenario. Dissipation, uptake to Lactuca sativa and the freely dissolved concentration along with the organic carbon-normalized sorption coefficients (Koc) were determined on days 12, 40, and 90 following the application of compounds at three fortification levels (0.1-1.0-10 mg/kg). Conazole fungicides showed similar dissipation patterns and were more persistent in soil than prochloraz, chlorpyrifos and pendimethalin. 2-Hydroxyatrazine showed a concentration-depended decrease in persistency in soil. Lettuce roots were shown to accumulate higher amounts than shoots where the extent of root uptake was driven by compound partitioning. This was evidenced by the ability of freely dissolved concentration (Cfree) to reliably (r2 = 0.94) predict root uptake. Concentration in leaves did not exceed the maximum residue levels (MRLs) for lettuce, which was likely given by the low root-to-shoot translocation factors (TFs) of the tested compounds varying between 0.007 and 0.14. Koc values were in the range of literature values. Sorption to soil was higher than to sand for all compounds, yet following the Koc dynamics compounds did not appear to be sequestered in soil with increasing residence time. From these results, it follows that the tested compounds may persist in soil but since they did not accumulate in lettuce above MRLs, contamination of the food web is unlikely.
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