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The effect of soil moisture content on the sorption of five sterol biosynthesis inhibiting fungicides as a function of their physicochemical properties
Author(s) -
Roy Céline,
Gaillardon Paul,
Montfort Françoise
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
pest management science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.296
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1526-4998
pISSN - 1526-498X
DOI - 10.1002/1526-4998(200009)56:9<795::aid-ps193>3.0.co;2-y
Subject(s) - sorption , chemistry , humus , environmental chemistry , water content , fungicide , loam , propiconazole , moisture , soil water , agronomy , soil science , organic chemistry , environmental science , adsorption , biology , geotechnical engineering , engineering
We investigated the sorption of five widely used sterol biosynthesis inhibitor fungicides (SBIs: flusilazole, propiconazole, epoxiconazole, fenpropimorph and prochloraz) on a loam soil to assess availability of the SBI residues that are usually left in soil after crop treatments. We focused particularly on the soil moisture content effect, which is poorly documented and is difficult to investigate under realistic conditions. SBI sorption was determined (using diuron as a reference) at two soil moisture contents (26.1% and 46.6% w/w) over a period of 3 weeks using a direct soil solution sampling method. After 24 h of contact, <1% of each applied fungicide was recovered in the soil solution. Despite their low availability in the liquid phase, long‐term sorption was observed for all the compounds, reducing concentrations in the soil solution and doubling the value of the partition coefficient. Significant effects of soil moisture on long‐term sorption were observed, depending on the properties of the chemicals and the sorption mechanisms. Wershaw's humus model (humic substances have a membrane‐like structure) was adapted to fit our observations. Low soil moisture content is assumed to modify the structure of humic substances and to generate hydrophobic surfaces, which favour sorption of hydrophobic fungicides (flusilazole, propiconazole and epoxiconazole). This effect is likely to decrease with the increase in the hydrophobic character of non‐ionic pesticides. It becomes adverse for the more hydrophilic compounds (diuron), which are more sorbed at high soil moisture content due to their higher affinity for hydrophilic regions of humus and to diffusion. Soil moisture effects are more complex when compounds are likely to be protonated in soil. Weakly basic compounds (prochloraz) may partition rapidly into the liquid‐like interior of humus at low soil moisture content but increased diffusion at high soil moisture content may cause additional sorption by ion exchange at colloid surfaces. Strongly basic compounds (fenpropimorph) may essentially adsorb due to ionic interactions with colloids, and their sorption is enhanced at high soil moisture content due to diffusion. Consequences for environmental fate and biological activity of pesticides are briefly discussed. © 2000 Society of Chemical Industry