Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol

Field aging immobilizes pollutants and reduces their toxicity, but it also boosts their accumulation and holds the risk of future release. We investigated the aging of six insecticides (water solubilities: 0.33 mg L-1- completely miscible) applied five times (10-day intervals) to a tropical fruit or...

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Main Authors: H. Ciglasch, J. Busche, W. Amelung, S. Totrakool, M. Kaupenjohann
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-600412018-09-10T03:39:44Z Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol H. Ciglasch J. Busche W. Amelung S. Totrakool M. Kaupenjohann Agricultural and Biological Sciences Chemistry Field aging immobilizes pollutants and reduces their toxicity, but it also boosts their accumulation and holds the risk of future release. We investigated the aging of six insecticides (water solubilities: 0.33 mg L-1- completely miscible) applied five times (10-day intervals) to a tropical fruit orchard under natural weather conditions. After sequential extractions of soil samples with 0.01 M CaCl2, methanol (MeOH), and acetone/ethylacetate/ water (AEW), a conventional (Kbc(app) = [c(MeOH) + c(AEW)]/c(CaCl2), normalized to soil organic carbon) and a newly introduced distribution ratio (MAR = MeOH/ AEW ratio; c(MeOH)/c(AEW)) were calculated. Field half-lives of the insecticides correlated with KOC(app) but not with MAR, which might reflect that dissipation was significantly affected by abiotic processes. The extent of aging was related to hydrophobicity of the compounds and most pronounced for endosulfan (3-fold increase in KOC(app) within 84 days). For dimethoate, this increase was even steeper (5- to 10-fold within 10 days), which was, however, mostly caused by dissipation from labile pools rather than by aging. The KOC(app) of chlorpyrifos remained constant, but a significant decrease in MAR (r = -0.78) revealed that sorption strength increased nevertheless. Results for malathion were ambiguous. Within the time frame of our study, neither KOC(app) nor MAR gave evidence for the aging of mevinphos. The different dynamics of KOC(app) and MAR for the six insecticides studied indicate that different aging mechanisms or rates, or both control the fate of the individual insecticides, which can potentially be revealed by sequential exctraction procedures. © 2008 American Chemical Society. 2018-09-10T03:37:33Z 2018-09-10T03:37:33Z 2008-10-22 Journal 00218561 2-s2.0-55549145486 10.1021/jf801545h https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=55549145486&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/60041
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Chemistry
spellingShingle Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Chemistry
H. Ciglasch
J. Busche
W. Amelung
S. Totrakool
M. Kaupenjohann
Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
description Field aging immobilizes pollutants and reduces their toxicity, but it also boosts their accumulation and holds the risk of future release. We investigated the aging of six insecticides (water solubilities: 0.33 mg L-1- completely miscible) applied five times (10-day intervals) to a tropical fruit orchard under natural weather conditions. After sequential extractions of soil samples with 0.01 M CaCl2, methanol (MeOH), and acetone/ethylacetate/ water (AEW), a conventional (Kbc(app) = [c(MeOH) + c(AEW)]/c(CaCl2), normalized to soil organic carbon) and a newly introduced distribution ratio (MAR = MeOH/ AEW ratio; c(MeOH)/c(AEW)) were calculated. Field half-lives of the insecticides correlated with KOC(app) but not with MAR, which might reflect that dissipation was significantly affected by abiotic processes. The extent of aging was related to hydrophobicity of the compounds and most pronounced for endosulfan (3-fold increase in KOC(app) within 84 days). For dimethoate, this increase was even steeper (5- to 10-fold within 10 days), which was, however, mostly caused by dissipation from labile pools rather than by aging. The KOC(app) of chlorpyrifos remained constant, but a significant decrease in MAR (r = -0.78) revealed that sorption strength increased nevertheless. Results for malathion were ambiguous. Within the time frame of our study, neither KOC(app) nor MAR gave evidence for the aging of mevinphos. The different dynamics of KOC(app) and MAR for the six insecticides studied indicate that different aging mechanisms or rates, or both control the fate of the individual insecticides, which can potentially be revealed by sequential exctraction procedures. © 2008 American Chemical Society.
format Journal
author H. Ciglasch
J. Busche
W. Amelung
S. Totrakool
M. Kaupenjohann
author_facet H. Ciglasch
J. Busche
W. Amelung
S. Totrakool
M. Kaupenjohann
author_sort H. Ciglasch
title Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
title_short Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
title_full Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
title_fullStr Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
title_full_unstemmed Field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern Thailand ultisol
title_sort field aging of insecticides after repeated application to a northern thailand ultisol
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=55549145486&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/60041
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