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  • Long-term fate of the herbicide cinosulfuron in lysimeters planted with rice over four consecutive years.

Long-term fate of the herbicide cinosulfuron in lysimeters planted with rice over four consecutive years.

Chemosphere (2002-10-12)
Jae Koo Lee, Fritz Führ, Jeong Wook Kwon, Ki Chang Ahn
ABSTRACT

In order to elucidate the long-term fate of the sulfonylurea herbicide cinosulfuron, the 14C-labelled chemical was applied to a clay loam soil, encased in two lysimeters, 22 days after rice (Oryza sativa L.) transplanting, and rice plants were grown for four consecutive years. Throughout the experimental period, leaching through soil profiles, absorption and translocation by rice plants, and distribution of 14C by downward movement in the soil layers were clarified. The total volume of leachates collected through the lysimeter soil over the four years amounted to 168 and 146 L in lysimeters I and II, respectively. The leachates contained 2.43% and 2.99% of the originally applied 14C-radioactivity, corresponding to an average concentration of 0.29 and 0.41 microg/L as the cinosulfuron equivalent in lysimeters I and II, respectively. The total 14C-radioactivity translocated to rice plants in the third and fourth year was 0.69% and 0.60% (lysimeter I), and 1.02% and 0.84% (lysimeter II) of the 14C applied, respectively. Larger amounts of cinosulfuron equivalents (0.54-0.75%) remained in the straw in the fourth year than in any other parts. The 14C-radioactivities distributed down to a depth of 70 cm after four years were 56.71-57.52% of the 14C applied, indicating the continuous downward movement and degradation of cinosulfuron in soil. The non-extractable residues were more than 88% of the soil radioactivity and some 45-48% of them was incorporated into the humin fraction. The 14C-radioactivity partitioned into the aqueous phase was nearly 30% of the extractable 14C, suggesting strongly that cinosulfuron was degraded into some polar products during the experimental period. It was found out in a supplemental investigation that flooding and constant higher temperature enhanced mineralization of [14C]cinosulfuron to 14CO2 in soil, indicating the possibility of chemical hydrolysis and microbial degradation of the compound in the flooded lysimeter soil.