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Title: Characterization of imidacloprid availability in subsurface soils

Authors
item Koskinen, William
item Moorman, Thomas
item Anhalt, Jennifer - IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY
item Papiernik, Sharon
item Cox, Lucia - CSIC-IRNAS, SEVILLE SP

Submitted to: International Congress of Pesticide Chemistry Abstracts
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: April 20, 2007
Publication Date: September 3, 2007
Citation: Koskinen, W.C., Moorman, T.B., Anhalt, J.C., Papiernik, S.K., Cox, L. 2007. Characterization of imidacloprid availability in subsurface soils. International Congress of Pesticide Chemistry Abstracts. XIII Symposium on Pesticide Chemistry. September 3-6, 2007. Piacenza, Italy. p. 39.

Technical Abstract: Degradation and sorption/desorption are the most important processes affecting the leaching of pesticides through soil because they control the amount of pesticide available for transport. Once pesticides move past the surface soil layers, variations in subsurface soil physical, chemical, and biological properties significantly affect pesticide fate and the potential for groundwater contamination. This research characterized the sorption-desorption of imidacloprid as a function of changing soil properties with depth in different soils. Sorption was highly variable, and desorption was hysteretic in all cases. Normalizing the sorption coefficients (Kf) to the organic carbon or the clay content of the soil did not reduce the variability in sorption coefficients for any compound. Data obtained suggest that imidacloprid was bioavailable to degrading soil microorganisms and sorption/desorption was not the limiting factor for biodegradation. It appears that differences in degrading populations may be the limiting factor for degradation. These results illustrate the importance of evaluation of the degradation and sorption data used to predict potential mobility. Understanding the variability of soil properties and processes as a function of soil depth is necessary for accurate prediction of pesticide dissipation.

   
 
 
Last Modified: 06/19/2013
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