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Environmental fate of the herbicide fluazifop-P-butyl
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and its degradation products in two loamy agricultural
3
soils – a combined laboratory and field study
4 5
Nora Badawi†, Annette E. Rosenbom†, Preben Olsen‡, Sebastian R. Sørensen†*
6 7 8 9
† Department of Geochemistry, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), Øster
10
Voldgade 10, 1350 Copenhagen K, Denmark
11 12
‡ Department of Agroecology, Aarhus University, Blichers Allé 20, DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark
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*Corresponding author
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Tel: +45 91333583
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Fax: +45 38142050
17
Email:
[email protected] 18 19 20
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ABSTRACT
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The herbicide fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB) is used against grasses in agricultural crops
23
such as potato, oilseed rape and sugar beet. Limited information is available in scientific
24
literature on its environmental fate, therefore extensive monitoring at two agricultural test
25
fields was combined with laboratory studies to determine leaching and the underlying
26
degradation and sorption processes. Water samples from drains, suction cups, and
27
groundwater wells showed leaching of the degradation products fluazifop-P (FP) and 2-
28
hydroxy-5-trifluoromethyl-pyridin (TFMP) following FPB treatment. Laboratory experiments
29
with soil from each field revealed a rapid degradation of FPB to FP. The degradation was
30
almost exclusively microbial, and further biodegradation to TFMP occurred at a slower rate.
31
Both degradation products were sorbed to the two soils to a small extent and were fairly
32
persistent to degradation during the two-month incubation period. Together, the field and
33
laboratory results from this study showed that the biodegradation of FPB in loamy soils gave
34
rise to the production of two major degradation products that sorbed to a small extent. In this
35
study, both degradation products leached to drainage and groundwater during precipitation. It
36
is therefore recommended that these degradation products be included in programs monitoring
37
water quality in areas with FPB use.
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Environmental Science & Technology
INTRODUCTION
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The selective post-emergence phenoxy herbicide fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB) is used
44
against annual and perennial grasses, for example in fruits, broadleaf crops, trees, and
45
ornamental nurseries.1 FPB is in use around the world in a variety of different products – for
46
example there are 22 different products containing FPB registered in the state of New York
47
alone.2 In northern European countries, however, FPB is primarily used in agricultural crops,
48
such as potato, oilseed rape, sugar beet, and pea.3 There is very limited information available
49
in scientific literature on the fate and behavior of FPB in the environment. Recent risk
50
assessments of FPB carried out by the European Food Safety Authority,3 the Canadian
51
Management Regulatory Agency,4 and the United States Environmental Protection Agency1
52
have taken several studies on the environmental fate of FPB into consideration. The vast
53
majority of these studies, however, have not been published in peer-reviewed journals, which
54
means that the technical approaches and data are unavailable to the scientific community.
55
Degradation of FPB in agricultural soils has been described as a combination of
56
abiotic hydrolysis and microbial activity.5 The degradation of hydrophobic and low water-
57
soluble FPB in soil is rapid, according to a recent EFSA report, with reported times for the
58
dissipation of 50% of the added amount (DT50 values) ranging from 0.3 to 2.9 days at 20°C.3
59
The initial steps of the pathway may involve degradation of FPB to fluazifop-P (FP), and
60
subsequently to the highly water-soluble 2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethyl-pyridin (TFMP)
61
(Scheme 1).6 Degradation rates reported for the first degradation product FP are slightly
62
longer, with reported DT50 values from a field study of nine arable soils ranging from 6 to 17
63
days.7 There is a lack of data on the fate of TFMP in soil, although the degradation product is
64
mentioned in several reports (sometimes noted as compound X), that suggest that it should be
65
classified as moderate to medium persistent in soil.3 Mineralization of FPB in soil
66
experiments has been reported in studies using
67
the rate appears to be slow, with a maximum of 9 – 30% mineralized to
14
C-pyridyl or
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C-phenyl-labelled FPB, but 14
CO2 within 168
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days.3 Bewick8 looked at the R- and S-enantiomeric degradation and mineralization of
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fluazifop-butyl (FB; a 1:1 racemic mixture of the S- and R-enantiomers) and fluazifop in soil,
70
and found that FPB (R-FB) was rapidly degraded to FP, in contrast to the S-enantiomer (S-
71
FB), which degraded more slowly. However, no difference in the mineralization potentials of
72
the two enantiomers of fluazifop was found, and a total of 4.5%
73
mineralized to 14CO2 within one week.8
14
C-phenyl-fluazifop was
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In many northern European countries, a high proportion of drinking water originates
75
from groundwater. In Denmark, for example, groundwater accounts for 100% of drinking
76
water, which places an emphasis on the quality of this resource. FP and TFMP are classified
77
as “relevant metabolites” by the European Commission, as defined in the Guidance document
78
on the assessment of the relevance of metabolites in groundwater of substances regulated
79
under Council Directive 91/414/EEC.9 As a consequence, they are restricted to a maximum
80
allowable concentration of 0.1 µg L-1 in drinking water.10 Knowledge about the fate and
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possible risk of leaching of FPB, FP, and TFMP from agricultural soils through the variably-
82
saturated zone into groundwater under field conditions is therefore of great importance and
83
calls for combined laboratory and field studies.
84
The aim of this study was two-fold: i) to monitor closely the leaching of degradation
85
products to drainage and groundwater following multiple FPB applications on different crops
86
during exposure to natural climatic conditions in two loamy agricultural fields included in the
87
Danish Pesticide Risk Assessment Program (PLAP),11,12 and ii) to determine the underlying
88
sorption and degradation processes of FPB, FP, and TFMP in plow layer soils sampled from
89
the two PLAP fields using controlled laboratory experiments.
90 91 92 93
MATERIALS AND METHODS Chemicals.
Analytical-grade
fluazifop-P-butyl
(FPB;
butyl
(R)-2-[4-(5-
trifluoromethyl-2-pyridyloxy)phenoxy]propionate; CAS RN 79241-46-6, > 96% purity), 4
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fluazifop-P (FP; (R)-2-(4-[5-(trifluoromethyl)-2-pyridyloxy]phenoxy)-propionic acid; CAS
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RN 83066-88-0, > 98% purity), and TFMP (2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethylpyridin; CAS RN
96
33252-63-0, > 97% purity) were purchased from Sigma Aldrich. The commercial FPB
97
products, Fusilade X-tra (250 g FPB L-1) and Fusilade Max (125 g FPB L-1), used in the field
98
study were purchased from Syngenta Crop Protection A/S, Denmark (formerly Zeneca Agro).
99
Fields, treatment, and monitoring. The two PLAP fields at Silstrup (1.7 ha) and
100
Faardrup (2.3 ha) are situated on flat or slightly sloping glacial tills with a shallow
101
groundwater table. During the monitoring period, the groundwater table was located 1.0 –
102
3.0 m below ground surface (b.g.s.) at Faardrup and 0.5 – 3.7 m b.g.s. at Silstrup. Tile drains
103
were installed more than five decades ago at a depth of approximately 1 m in both fields. The
104
drainage systems were modified prior to PLAP monitoring by cutting off and blocking any
105
drainpipes transporting water from upstream fields, thereby ensuring that the sampled
106
drainage water only came from the PLAP field.13 These loamy soils are characterized by
107
preferential transport through macropores such as wormholes and fractures and further details
108
on the characteristics of these two sites are available in Rosenbom et al. 12
109
The leaching of FPB, FP, and TFMP has been monitored for several years in the two
110
fields. Throughout that time, changes have been made to the monitoring program. Details on
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this are summarized in Table 1. FPB was originally included in the monitoring at Faardrup,
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but the lack of detections combined with knowledge from literature meant that it was
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excluded from the monitoring program after three years. Initially, TFMP was not included in
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the monitoring program, but it was subsequently suspected of being an important degradation
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product and therefore included in the analysis program at Silstrup in July 2008 and at
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Faardrup in April 2011.
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In accordance with conventional agricultural practice in the area, the two fields are
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cultivated with crop rotations in which FPB was applied in red fescue grass, fodder and sugar 5
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beet.12 FPB was applied against weeds five times at Silstrup and twice at Faardrup, at the
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maximum permitted dose of the active ingredient (Table 1). The water balance including
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precipitation and leaching have been monitored continuously in the two fields since May
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2000. Additional climatic data are obtained from automatic climate stations located 0.5 – 3.0
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km from the fields. To avoid an artificial bypass of the soil layer and direct leaching of
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pesticides into the groundwater, all sampling equipment was installed from or within the
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buffer strips surrounding the treated area. Furthermore, all soil sampling was restricted to the
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upper 20 cm (the plow layer) in order to keep the subsoil intact.
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Water samples were collected from the tile drain system and the vertical and
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horizontal groundwater screens. The drainage was sampled flow proportionally, with
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subsamples collected for every 3000 L of flow during winter (September – May) and for
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every 1500 L during summer (June – August) each week. All the collected subsamples were
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pooled weekly and sent to the accredited commercial laboratory for analysis. The detection
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limits for the accredited analyses were 0.01 µg L-1 for FPB and FP, and 0.02 µg L-1 for
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TFMP. As the samples were pooled, they do not represent the peak concentrations that may
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have occurred during the week. Samples were refrigerated at all times. The vertical
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groundwater wells consisted of four 1-m screens covering approximately the upper four
136
meters of the saturated zone. Two horizontal wells were installed 3.5 m b.g.s., consisting of an
137
18-m screen, providing integrated water samples that represented the groundwater directly
138
beneath the field. Additional information about sampling methods and monitoring design is
139
available.13-17
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Laboratory degradation studies. Soil from the two loamy PLAP fields were sampled
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from the plow layer (0 – 20 cm b.g.s.) in March 2014 and transported back to the laboratory
142
and stored in the dark at 10°C until the start of the experiments. Degradation of FPB (3 µmol
143
kg-1 soil) and the occurrence of the degradation products FP and TFMP were measured in the
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two soils, in addition to the degradation of FP (4 µmol kg-1 soil) and TFMP (9 µmol kg-1 soil) 6
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individually. 0.5-g subsamples (wet weight; soil water content in Faardrup was 20% and in
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Silstrup 30%) were transferred to sterile 20 ml Pyrex glass tubes with PTFE sealed screw
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caps. Stock solutions of the three compounds were prepared in acetonitrile and spiked (50 µl)
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individually to the 0.5-g subsamples (in triplicates). Samples were left for four hours to
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evaporate the acetonitrile before adding a further 2 g of soil to each subsample. The soil in
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each tube was mixed, 500 µl sterile milliQ water was added, and then the samples were
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incubated in the dark at 15°C. Samples were set up in parallel, and triplicate samples were
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terminated at each sampling time point. Abiotic degradation of FPB, FP, and TFMP was
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studied in autoclaved soil and the experiment was set up in parallel, similar to the degradation
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experiment. The two soils were autoclaved four times before spiking with FPB, FP, and
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TFMP. Extraction of FPB, FP, and TFMP from all soil samples was performed as described
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in Negre et al.,18 with slight modifications. In brief, 2.5 ml extraction solution consisting of
157
methanol:1M HCL (9:1, v/v) was added to each sample and agitated at 150 rpm overnight.
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The following day, samples were centrifuged at 1,500 g (20 min), the supernatant was
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transferred to 2 ml safe-seal tubes, and then centrifuged again at 10,000 g (15 min). 500-µl
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aliquots of the supernatant were then filtered (PTFE filters, 0.22 µm, Titan Filtration Systems;
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Sun SRi, Wilmington, NC, USA) directly into HPLC vials and diluted 1:1 with acidified
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milliQ water (pH 2.2).
163
The diluted soil extracts were analyzed by a gradient liquid chromatography method
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using a UPLC system (ACQUITY UPLCTM; Waters, Milford, MA, USA) with a photodiode
165
array detector scanning the interval of 210 – 300 nm. Chromatography was performed on a
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Waters ACQUITY UPLC BEH C18 (1.7 µm, 2.1 × 50 mm) column with a mobile phase
167
consisting of acetonitrile and acidified milliQ water (pH 2.2), a column temperature of 40°C
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and a flow rate of 0.7 ml min-1. The retention times and photodiode array spectra of the
169
analytical-grade standards were used to identify the compounds. MassLynxTM software
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version 4.1 (Waters, Milford, MA, USA) was used for data acquisition and processing. The 7
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UPLC quantification limits for FPB, FP, and TFMP in the soil extracts were 0.07, 0.06, and
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0.3 µmol kg-1 soil, respectively. The recoveries of the three compounds from the soils were in
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the range of 93-97%.
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The degradation curves were fitted to a simple first order decay equation, and the first
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order degradation rate constant (k) and DT50 value (the time to 50% degradation of the initial
176
content of the compound) were determined using the following equations:
177 178
t = 0 ×
179
DT50 =
(1)
(2)
180 181
where Ct is the concentration (µmol kg-1) of pesticide remaining in the soil at time t (days), C0
182
is the initial concentration (µmol kg-1) of pesticide in the sample, and k is the degradation rate
183
(days-1).
184
Soil sorption experiments. The batch equilibrium technique described in OECD
185
Guideline 10619 was used to determine the soil sorption coefficients Kd (mL g-1) for FP and
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TFMP in four replicates. Sorption of FPB was not tested since it is reported that FPB is
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rapidly hydrolyzed in soil.3, 5 Solutions of FP and TFMP were prepared in 0.01 M CaCl2 and
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the final concentration in the samples was similar to the laboratory degradation study.
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Following standard batch equilibrium technique procedures, 2 grams of air-dried soil
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were pre-equilibrated with 3.6 ml 0.01 M CaCl2 (containing 0.01 M NaN3 to avoid microbial
191
degradation during incubation) in glass tubes and rotated overnight in the dark to establish
192
equilibrium before being combined with each degradation product solution (400 µl) to
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provide a final soildry-weight:solutionCaCl2 ratio of 1:2 (w/v). Samples were rotated for 96 hours
194
before being centrifuged for 20 min at 1,500 g. 1.5-mL subsamples of the supernatants were
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then transferred to 2 ml Eppendorf tubes, centrifuged at 10,000 g (15 min), and filtered (PTFE 8
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filters, 0.22 µm) into HPLC vials. Samples were analyzed by UPLC to measure Ce (µmol L-1),
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the concentration of pesticide remaining in solution after adsorption. Four replicates per
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degradation product only containing the 0.01 M CaCl2 (and 0.01 M NaN3) solution (no soil)
199
were included and used as the reference for Ci, the initial sample concentration (mg L-1).
200
Triplicate blank samples of soil and CaCl2 (0.01 M NaN3) solution (no degradation products)
201
were used as background references for the UPLC analysis.
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The amount of degradation product adsorbed to the soil was calculated as the
203
difference between the concentration of degradation product initially present in the solution
204
(Ci, µmol L-1) and the concentration remaining at the end of the incubation (Ce, µmol L-1).
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Since NaN3 (a strong antimicrobial agent) was added to all samples in the sorption
206
experiment, it was assumed that removal of the degradation products from the solution was
207
due solely to sorption to the soil. The amount of the degradation product adsorbed in the solid
208
phase, Cs (µmol kg-1), was then calculated as:
209 210
s =
(ie)
(3)
s
211 212 213
where V (mL) is the volume of the solution in the samples and ms is the mass of the soil (g). The soil sorption coefficient Kd (mL g-1) was then calculated as:
214 215
s
d =
(4)
e
216 217
RESULTS
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Leaching of FPB and its degradation products from the PLAP fields. The data
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from the field experiments are summarized in Table 1. FPB was monitored in water from a
220
depth of 1 meter in the variably-saturated zone (tile drains and suction cups) and in the 9
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saturated zone (groundwater wells) in the first two years of the field experiments at Faardrup
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following the first treatment in 2001 (Table 1). After this period, the suction cups were
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removed from the monitoring program. No FPB was detected in 120 water analyses from the
224
drains (98 samples) and suction cups (22 samples) or 199 analyses of groundwater (Table 1)
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during this period, and it was therefore decided that the herbicide itself would be excluded
226
from the remaining monitoring campaign.
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After the first treatment with FPB in the year 2000 – 2001, the degradation product FP
228
could be detected in groundwater in both fields. At Silstrup, FP was not detected in the
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variably-saturated zone, and was only detected in 1 out of 95 groundwater samples collected
230
from the saturated zone (Table 1) at a concentration of 0.07 µg L-1. At Faardrup, FP was
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detected six times in the groundwater, with a maximum concentration of 0.17 µg L-1.
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Furthermore, FP was detected 13 times in water from the drainage and suction cups, with five
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detections at or above the threshold limit of 0.1 µg L-1, with the highest concentration (3.80
234
µg L-1) measured in drainage (Table 1). Following the herbicide treatments in 2008 and 2010
235
at Silstrup, FP was not detected (analyses of 40 samples of drainage and 169 samples from
236
groundwater) and was consequently excluded from the monitoring program at Silstrup. The
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change to the monitoring program was introduced in December 2010, half way through the
238
2010-2011 monitoring period. However, FP was monitored in the drainage at Faardrup in the
239
period 2011-2012, but was not detected in the drainage (25 samples) following the treatment
240
in 2011 (Table 1).
241
During the last four field treatments at Silstrup (2008 – 2012) and the last treatment at
242
Faardrup (2011), the degradation product TFMP was included in the monitoring program.
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This revealed a leaching of this compound to the drainage at maximum concentrations during
244
the hydrological year, ranging from 0.03 µg L-1 to 0.64 µg L-1 at Silstrup. TFMP was also
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detected in the groundwater at Silstrup during this period in maximum concentrations during 10
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the hydrological year from 0.03-0.29 µg L-1, with 28% out of a total of 312 samples
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containing this degradation product (Table 1). In contrast, no TFMP was detected in samples
248
collected at Faardrup (58 in the variably-saturated zone and 122 in the saturated zone).
249
Following the FPB treatment in the Silstrup field in 2008 and 2012, a high frequency of
250
TFMP detection in both drainage and groundwater was evident. In drainage, for example, the
251
degradation product was detected in 100% of the samples taken in the year following the 2008
252
application (17 out of 17), all at concentrations above 0.1 µg L-1 (Table 1). In the same period,
253
TFMP was detected in 48% of the groundwater samples (46 out of 95), with a maximum
254
concentration of 0.29 µg L-1 (nine samples had detections above 0.1 µg L-1). A similar pattern
255
with a high detection frequency of TFMP was apparent following the 2012 application. Both
256
time periods were influenced by a high amount of precipitation at Silstrup during the month
257
after application, with 105 mm in July 2008 and 127 mm in April-May 2012. In contrast, the
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lack of TFMP detection at Faardrup after the 2011 application coincided with less
259
precipitation (59 mm) and, compared to Silstrup, Faardrup received less yearly precipitation
260
in general and therefore yielded less percolation to the tile drains and groundwater (Table 1).
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Degradation and sorption experiments. With the aim of determining the potential
262
for degradation and sorption of FPB and its two degradation products FP and TFMP in
263
agricultural soils, soil samples were obtained from the plow layers in each of the two fields
264
and used for controlled laboratory experiments. The degradation experiments are presented in
265
Figures 1 and 2 and the calculated DT50-values are summarized in Table 2, together with the
266
sorption data.
267
FPB was rapidly degraded to almost equivalent amounts of the degradation product FP
268
in soils from both Silstrup (DT50 = 17 hours) and Faardrup (DT50 = 26 hours) (Table 2).
269
TFMP was also produced, but at a much slower rate and later in the incubation period in both
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soils (Figure 1 A, B). In contrast to the rapid biodegradation of FPB, further degradation of
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the two degradation products FP and TFMP was slow. The degradation of FP and the 11
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formation of TFMP were not observed until day ten in the Silstrup soil and day 20 in the
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Faardrup soil (Figure 1 C, D) in samples where FP was initially added. Samples where TFMP
274
had been added showed a degradation slower than that of FPB and approximately similar to
275
that of FP (Figure 1 E, F). FPB was primarily biodegraded in both soils, and only a negligible
276
abiotic transformation to FP was apparent in the sterilized soils within the first few days of
277
incubation (Figure 2 A, B). No abiotic transformation of FP and TFMP was observed in the
278
two soils within the two-month incubation period (Figure 2 C-F).
279
Sorption of the two degradation products to the soil was evaluated using OECD
280
Guideline 106.18 Sorption of FPB was not included due to its rapid biodegradation to FP
281
within a matter of hours. Both soils had very low sorption capacities of the degradation
282
products. Slightly lower sorption was observed in the Faardrup soil compared to the Silstrup
283
soil, with FP having a Kd of 0.14 and 0.49 mL g-1, and TFMP having Kd-values of 0.18 and
284
0.39 mL g-1 (Table 2).
285 286
DISCUSSION
287
Keeping up with the constant flow of new pesticide products being launched on the
288
international market is a major task for environmental scientists, especially when most of the
289
studies conducted for regulatory purposes are unavailable to the scientific community. A
290
further challenge is presented by degradation products that are found to be relevant for
291
groundwater: in many countries, degradation products deemed relevant are those that leach
292
into the groundwater in concentrations above 0.1 µg L-1.20 The PLAP project was designed to
293
serve as an early warning system for testing pesticides already on the market.12 It has been
294
used to evaluate the leaching risk of 50 pesticides and 50 degradation products at five
295
agricultural fields monitored in Denmark, and new compounds are added to the program
296
every year. Even though methods for evaluating pesticide degradation in the environment are 12
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being developed and tested,20-22 assessing the field behavior of the ever-increasing range of
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new pesticide products under realistic conditions is a challenge. Upcoming analytical
299
techniques such as compound-specific isotope analysis21 and enantiomer fractionation
300
analysis22 can, for example, be used to demonstrate biodegradation potential, differentiate
301
between abiotic and biotic degradation and even indicate which microbial degradation
302
pathway is the most active one for specific pesticides, without measuring degradation
303
products. However, these analytical techniques require time-consuming method development
304
for each compound separately. At present, this is not a realistic approach for determining
305
leaching and the underlying processes for the large number of pesticide products on the
306
market.
307
Even with FPB-based products being used on a wide variety of different crops around
308
the world, several recent regional or national evaluations of FPB have highlighted the lack of
309
available data on the fate and behavior of this herbicide in the environment.1, 3, 4 Based on
310
massive field monitoring experiments (> 1800 analyses of FPB, FP, or TFMP in water
311
samples) at the two PLAP fields, leaching of the two degradation products FP and TFMP was
312
observed in the months following application of FPB in concentrations above the European
313
Commission’s (EC) maximum allowable concentration of 0.1 µg L-1. This is in contrast to an
314
earlier study by Mills and Simmons,6 where a groundwater monitoring survey in northern
315
Italy and Germany was used to conclude that agricultural use of FPB posed a negligible risk
316
of groundwater contamination with FP and TFMP. In a similar study focusing on fluazifop-
317
butyl, there were detections above the EC threshold concentration in both river water and
318
groundwater in an agricultural area in Spain.23 However, this study did not include any of the
319
degradation products. Prior to the introduction of FPB, fluazifop-butyl was used instead,
320
which is a racemic mixture of both the R- and S-enantiomer of the compound.8 The R-
321
enantiomer has a higher herbicidal activity and at present only the R-isomer (FPB) is used.
322
Another strong indication of the potential for leaching of degradation products after the 13
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addition of FPB is reported in a study of 21 pesticides in a full-scale model biobed.24 The
324
degradation product FP was the only degradation product from FPB that was included, and it
325
was among the four most frequently detected pesticide residues in effluent from the biobed
326
system.
327
Soils sampled from the two PLAP fields showed a potential for rapid biodegradation
328
of FPB, with DT50-values of 17 and 26 hours, and no or only minor abiotic transformation
329
during the laboratory experiments. These degradation rates are in the same range as
330
previously reported values.3, 5, 7, 8 However, the observed degradation of FP was much slower,
331
with DT50 values greater than two months in both Silstrup and Faardrup soil. This slow
332
degradation of FP was in contrast to previously reported DT50 values ranging from only 6 to
333
23 days.7, 25 The main degradation product was FP and the sequence in the detection of the
334
degradation products could suggest a further degradation of this compound to TFMP (as
335
shown in Scheme 1). Although only minor degradation of FP to TFMP was seen within the
336
incubation period, the field study confirmed that TFMP is produced under field conditions.
337
The slow production of TFMP observed in the laboratory could suggest that TFMP is formed
338
through an intermediate degradation product. In Scheme 1 the theoretical degradation of FP
339
via compound IV to TFMP is proposed. This pathway is suggested by the European Food
340
Safety Authority.3 Compound IV is mentioned as a major degradation product in soil at 10°C,
341
and might be classified as moderate to highly persistent (a study based on one soil and data
342
not published in peer-reviewed literature).3 Since compound IV is not included in the present
343
degradation studies or in the PLAP program, this pathway could not be confirmed in these
344
agricultural soils. A fourth degradation product, designated compound III (Scheme 1), is also
345
mentioned by the European Food Safety Authority,3 but the degradation product was only
346
observed in plant material at low concentrations after spraying with FPB.
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The slow production of TFMP and its persistence in soil (DT50 > 68 days) observed in
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both PLAP fields, combined with a reported minor extent of complete FPB mineralization (9 -
349
30%)3 could suggest a production of other intermediate degradation products in soil. Based on
350
the mass balance established in the laboratory study (Figure 1), it appears that the PLAP
351
monitoring program at Silstrup and Faardrup covers the major degradation products produced
352
following initial degradation of FPB. Inclusion of compound IV in future degradation and
353
leaching studies might contribute to clarifying the complete pathway. The pathway covering
354
compound III and degradation products further down the complete degradation pathway
355
remains to be studied in detail.
356
The low soil sorption of the two degradation products could explain why they were
357
detected in drainage and groundwater below the PLAP fields. Furthermore, low sorption and
358
high water solubility could be reflected in the high detection frequency at Silstrup in the
359
month after the applications in 2008 and 2012 during high amounts of precipitation. Sorption
360
values (Kd) of 0.3 - 1.6 mL g-1have been reported for FP in previous peer-reviewed studies,7, 26
361
whereas the European Food Safety Authority reported a wider range of Kd values from 0.5 to
362
24.9 mL g-1. Sorption of TFMP (Kd) has been reported to be 0.3 - 1.4 mL g-1.3 An even lower
363
sorption capacity of FP was observed in the present study than the reported values from Kah
364
and Brown.26 A similar low sorption of TFMP was observed at Faardrup, whereas TFMP was
365
found to be even less sorbed than FP in Silstrup soil. No peer-reviewed studies are available
366
on the sorption of TFMP in soil, but from the present study it is evident that both TFMP and
367
FP have a low sorption capacity in plow layer soil and that they are fairly persistent to
368
degradation. This means that there is a high risk of both degradation products leaching.
369
Altogether, these results show that field application of FPB can give rise to leaching of
370
degradation products to groundwater in concentrations that exceed the threshold limit of 0.1
371
µg L-1. This observation is explained by a rapid microbial degradation of FPB to FP, and a 15
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further slower degradation to TFMP. Both of these degradation products sorb to the soils to a
373
small extent, resulting in leaching following rain events. These results underline the
374
importance of including FP and TFMP in groundwater monitoring programs in areas where
375
the herbicide is used.
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FIGURES
377 378
Figure 1. Degradation of fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB) (∆) (A, B) and the two degradation products
379
fluazifop-P (FP) (●) (C, D) and 2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethyl-pyridin (TFMP) (□) (E, F) in
380
soil from Silstrup and Faardrup. The data are mean values (n = 3); bars indicate standard
381
deviations, with some being smaller than the symbol.
382 383 384
Figure 2. Abiotic transformation of fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB) (∆) (A, B) and the two
385
degradation products fluazifop-P (FP) (●) (C, D) and 2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethyl-pyridine
386
(TFMP) (□) (E, F) in sterilized soil from Silstrup and Faardrup. The data are mean values (n =
387
3) and bars indicate the standard deviations, with some being smaller than the symbol.
388
17
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389
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
390
This study was funded by the National Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland and the
391
Danish Pesticide Leaching Assessment Program. We would like to thank the many people
392
whose work within the program made the present study possible, especially Mai-Britt
393
Fruekilde (pesticide analysis), Lasse Gudmundsson and Jens Molbo (technical assistance in
394
the field), Spire M. Kiersgaard and Martin H. Engqvist for their help with the laboratory
395
studies of degradation and sorption, and Claire Tarring for revising the manuscript.
396 397 398
REFERENCES
399
(1) Report of the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) Tolerance Reassessment Progress and
400
Risk Management Decision (TRED) for Fluazifop-P-butyl; United states Environmental
401
Protection Agency: Washington, DC, 2005;
402
http://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi/P1002OAF.PDF?Dockey=P1002OAF.PDF.
403
(2) Registration of the Major Change in Labeling for the Product Fusilade DX Herbicide
404
(EPA Reg. No. 100-1070) Containing the Active Ingredient Fluazifop-p-Butyl (chemical code
405
122809); New York State Department of Environmental Conservation: New York, 2014;
406
http://pmep.cce.cornell.edu/profiles/herb-growthreg/fatty-alcohol-monuron/fluazifop-
407
butyl/fluazifop-p-butyl_mcl_0514.pdf.
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(3) Conclusion on the peer review of the pesticide risk assessment of the active substance
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fluazifop-P (evaluated variant fluazifop-P-butyl); European Food Safety Authority: Parma,
410
Italy, 2012; www.efsa.europa.eu/de/search/doc/2945.pdf.
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(4) Fluazifop-P-butyl, Re-evaluation decision; Pest Management Regulatory Agency: Ontario,
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Canada, 2012; www.hc-sc.gc.ca/cps-spc/alt_formats/pdf/pubs/pest/decisions/rvd2012-
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05/rvd2012-05-eng.pdf.
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(5) Negre, M.; Gennari, M.; Cignetti, A.; Zanini, E. Degradation of fluzifop-butyl in soil and
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aqueous systems. J. Agric. Food Chem. 1988, 36, 1319-1322.
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(6) Mills, M.S.; Simmons, N.D. Assessing the groundwater contamination potential of
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agricultural chemicals: a flexible approach to mobility and degradation studies. Pestic. Sci.
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1998, 54, 418-434.
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(7) Kah, M.; Beulke, S.; Brown, C.D. Factors Influencing Degradation of Pesticides in Soil. J.
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Agric. Food Chem. 2007, 55, 4487-4492.
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(8) Bewick, D.W. Stereochemistry of fluazifop-butyl transformations in soil. Pestic. Sci.
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1986, 17, 349-356.
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(9) Guidance document on the assessment of the relevance of metabolites in groundwater of
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substances regulated under Council Directive 91/414/EEC; European Commission: Brussels,
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Belgium, 2003;
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www.ec.europa.eu/food/plant/pesticides/approval_active_substances/docs/wrkdoc21_en.pdf.
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(10) Council Directive 98/83/EC of 3 November 1998 on the quality of water intended for
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human consumption; European Union: EUR-lex, 1998; http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
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content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:31998L0083&from=EN.
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(11) Danish Pesticide Leaching Assessment Programme (PLAP) Website;
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http://pesticidvarsling.dk.
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(12) Rosenbom, A.E.; Olsen, P; Plauborg, F.; Grant, R.; Juhler, R. K.; Brüsch, W.; Kjær, J.
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Pesticide leaching through sandy and loamy fields – long-term lessons learnt from the Danish
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Pesticide Leaching Assessment Programme. Environ. Poll. 2015, 201, 75-90.
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(13) The Danish Pesticide Leaching Assessment Programme: Site characterization and
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monitoring design. Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland: Copenhagen, Denmark,
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2001; http://pesticidvarsling.dk/publ_result/plap_site_char_2001.html.
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(14) Ernsten, V.; Olsen, P; Rosenbom, A.E. Long-term monitoring of nitrate-N transport to
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drainage from three agricultural clayey till fields. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. 2015, 19, 1-32. 19
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(15) Jørgensen, L.F.; Kjær, J.; Olsen, P.; Rosenbom, A.E. Leaching of azoxystrobin and its
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degradation product R234886 from Danish agricultural field sites. Chemosphere. 2012, 88,
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554-562.
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(16) Kjær, J.; Olsen, P.; Ullum, M.; Grant, R. Leaching of glyphosat and amino-
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methylphosphonic acid from Danish agricultural field sites. J. Environ. Qual. 2005, 34, 608-
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620.
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(17) Kjær, J.; Olsen, P.; Bach, K.; Barlebo, H. C.; Ingerslev, F.; Hansen, M.; Sørensen, B. H.
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Leaching of estrogenic hormones from manure-treated structured soils. Environ. Sci. Technol.
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2007, 41, 3911-3917.
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(18) Negre, M.; Gennari, M.; Cignetti, A. High performance liquid chromatographic
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determination of fluazifop-butyl and fluazifop in soil and water. J. Chromatogr. 1987, 387,
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541-545.
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(19) OECD Guidelines for the testing of chemicals Test No. 106: Adsorption - Desorption
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Using a Batch Equilibrium Method. ©OECD Publishing, 2000; http://www.oecd-
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ilibrary.org/docserver/download/9710601e.pdf?expires=1421851570&id=id&accname=guest
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&checksum=8155A74BF71140C3E9930FB23D107BF0.
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(20) Fenner, K.; Canonica, S.; Wackett, L. P.; Elsner, M. Evaluating pesticide degradation in
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the environment: Blind spots and emerging opportunities. Science. 2013, 341, 752-758.
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(21) Penning, H.; Sørensen, S. R.; Meyer, A. H.; Aamand, J.; Elsner, J. C, N, and H isotope
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fraction of the herbicide isoproturon reflects different microbial transformation pathways.
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Environ. Sci. Technol. 2010, 44, 2372-2378.
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(22) Qiu, S.; Gözdereliler, E.; Weyrauch, P.; Magana Lopez, E. C.; Kohler, H-P. E.; Sørensen,
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S. R.; Meckenstock, R. U.; Elsner, M. Small 13C/12C fractionation contrasts with large
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enantiomer fractionation in aerobic biodegradation of phenoxy acids. Environ. Sci. Technol.
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2014, 48, 5501-5511.
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(23) Martínez, R. C.; Gonzalo, E. R.; Laespada, M. E. F.; San Román F. J. S. Evaluation of
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surface- and groundwater pollution due to pesticides in agricultural areas of Zamora and
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Salamanca (Spain). J. Chromatogr. 2000, 866, 471-480.
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(24) Spliid, N.H.; Helweg, A.; Heinrichson, K. Leaching and degradation of 21 pesticides in a
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full-scale model biobed. Chemosphere. 2006, 65, 2223-2232.
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(25) Smith, A.E. Persistence studies with the herbicide fluazifop-butyl in Saskatchewan soils
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under laboratory and field conditions. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 1987, 39, 150-155.
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(26) Kah, M.; Brown, C.D. Prediction of the Adsorption of Ionizable Pesticides in Soils. J.
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Agric. Food Chem. 2007, 55, 2312-2322.
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(27) Allerup, P.; Madsen, H. Accuracy of the point of precipitation measurements. Nord.
475
Hydrol. 1980, 11, 57-70.
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Table 1. Fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB), fluazifop-P (FP), and TFMP detections and maximum concentrations of hydrological years (1 July – 30 June) in the period July 2000 to June 2013. Data were obtained from analyses of water samples collected from the variably-saturated (drainage and suction cups) and saturated zones (groundwater monitoring wells) at the loamy PLAP fields Silstrup and Faardrup. Gray areas indicate water samples with concentrations above the detection limit of 0.01 µg L-1 for FPB and FP, and 0.02 µg L-1 for TFMP. The yearly precipitation and measured drainage are presented for each hydrological year within the monitoring period. Furthermore, the first month’s precipitation after FPB application is presented together with the date and dose of the application.
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2010-April 2011*,**
1027
172
53
02-052010
2011-April 2012*
995
218
26
26-042011
2012-13
1020
261
127
2001-02
810
197
56
2002-03
636
49
2011-12*
828
98
59
21-052011
Detections
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
Analyses
Detections
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
Detections
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
Analyses
Detections
Detections
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
Analyses
Detections
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
-
32
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
32
0
0 -
-
-
-
144
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
42
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
19
0
0 -
-
-
-
95
1
0
0.07 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
17
0
0
0
17
17
17
0.52 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
94
0
0
0
95
46
9
0.29
-
-
-
14
0
0
0
14
3
0
0.03 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
46
0
0
0
46
2
0
0.03
0.2
-
-
-
9
0
0
0
17
1
0
0.06 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
29
0
0
0
49
0
0
0.00
0.2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
21
8
3
0.64 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
63
7
4
0.22
0.2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
22
22
4
0.41 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
59
32
3
0.12
0.4
Analyses
Dose [kg of FPB ha-1]
Time of FPB application 19-042012 21-062001
-
0.4
0.2
-
58
0
0
58
10
5
3.8 -
-
-
-
40
0
0
40
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
25
0
0
0
-
-
2012-13 569 62 * Monitoring period ended in April †† Monitoring of fluazifop-P (FP) ended in December 2010 *** Precipitation is corrected to soil surface according to the method of Allerup and Madsen.26
-
22
0
0
22
3
0
0.09
86
0
0
86
6
1
0
0 113
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
113
0.17 -
Cmax [µg L-1]
758
01-072008
-
0.4
Detections
2009-April 2010*
105
Total no. of:
Analyses
161
Total no. of:
Cmax [µg L-1]
985
Total no. of:
Analyses
2008-09
Total no. of:
Cmax [µg L-1]
227
FPB
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
1034
FP
Total no. of:
Analyses
2001-02
28-062000
Total no. of:
Cmax [µg L-1]
52
FPB
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
217
Total no. of:
TFMP
Detections
909
Total no. of:
Saturated zone Groundwater monitoring wells FP TFMP
Suction cups
Analyses
2000-01
FPB
Cmax [µg L-1]
First month of precipitation following application [mm] ***
Faardrup
Measured drainage [mm year-1]
Silstrup
Precipitation [mm year-1]***
Field
Monitoring period (from FPB application date or 1 July - 30 June following year)
Variably-saturated zone Drainage FP
Detections => 0.1 µg L-1
Page 23 of 28
-
-
-
-
-
-
34
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
65
0
0
0
24
0
0
0 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
57
0
0
0
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Table 2. Measured pH, water content, half-life of fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB, DT50) and sorption coefficient (Kd) of the two degradation products fluazifop-P (FP) and 2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethylpyridine (TFMP) in soil samples from the plow layer at Silstrup and Faardrup Soil Silstrup Faardrup
pH (CaCl2) 5.85 6.19
Water content [%] 29.3 19.4
DT50 FPB [hours (R2)] 17 (0.98) 26 (0.95)
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Kd TFMP [mL g-1] 0.39 0.18
Kd FP [mL g-1] 0.49 0.14
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Environmental Science & Technology
N
O
F O F
F
O
fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB)
CH3
H3C O
?
N
OH
F F N
O
? F TFMP
F O HO
?
F
F
OH
fluazifop-P (FP)
H3C N
O
O
?
?
?
O
F
OH
?
H3C
Compound III
OH F
O
F
Compound IV
Scheme 1. Proposed degradation pathway of fluazifop-P-butyl (FPB) in soil, including the main degradation products fluazifop-P (FP) and 2-hydroxy-5-trifluoromethyl-pyridin (TFMP). Solid lines represent observed microbial degradation steps in soil. Punctuated lines represent theoretical degradation steps not confirmed in this study
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Silstrup
Faardrup
Degradation of FPB
Degradation of FPB
4
4
B
FPB FP TFMP
3
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
A
2
1
0
3
2
1
0 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
Days
Degradation of FP
40
50
60
70
60
70
Degradation of FP 5
C
D
FP TFMP
4
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
30
Days
5
3
2
1
0
4
3
2
1
0 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
Days
30
40
50
Days
Degradation of TFMP
Degradation of TFMP
12
12
F
E 10
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Page 26 of 28
8 6 4 2
TFMP
0
10 8 6 4 2 0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
Days
30
40
Days
Figure 1
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60
70
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Environmental Science & Technology
Silstrup
Faardrup
Abiotic controls - FPB
Abiotic controls - FPB
5
5
B
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
A 4
3
FPB FP
2
1
0
4
3
2
1
0 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
Days
Abiotic controls - FP
50
60
70
60
70
Abiotic controls - FP 5
D
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
C
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
40
Days
5
4
3
2
1
FP
0
4
3
2
1
0 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
Days
30
40
50
Days
Abiotic controls - TFMP
Abiotic controls - TFMP
12
12
F
E 10
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
Concentration (µmol kg-1)
30
8 6 4 2
TFMP
0
10 8 6 4 2 0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
Days
20
30
40
Days
Figure 2
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60
70
Environmental Science & Technology
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