Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils

Improving the existing knowledge on the enantioselectivity of processes affecting chiral pesticide enantiomers in the environment is necessary to maximize the efficacy and minimize the environmental impact caused by the use of pesticides with chiral properties. In this work, the enantioselectivity of the sorption, degradation, and leaching processes of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in three slightly alkaline, agricultural soils from southern Spain was studied. Batch sorption experiments indicated that the sorption of racemic-metalaxyl on soils, their clay (< 2 οm) fractions, and a number of model sorbents simulating naturally-occurring soil colloidal particles was non-enantioselective; the S-enantiomer was sorbed to the same extent as the R-enantiomer on all soil materials. Soil incubation experiments revealed that the R-enantiomer of metalaxyl was degraded faster than the S-enantiomer in all three soils, but the extent and enantioselectivity of metalaxyl degradation was soil-dependent, occurring more slowly and with less enantioselectivity in the fine-textured soil (soil 1) than in the coarse-textured soils (soils 2 and 3). For soils 2 and 3, S- and R-metalaxyl dissipation data were very well described by single first-order kinetics, whereas for soil 1 dissipation data were better fitted by two coupled first-order equations. It is suggested that sorption and entrapment of metalaxyl enantiomers in the abundant small-size pores of soil 1 (i.e., pore radius < 100 nm) could have resulted in a fraction of the fungicide of reduced bioavailability, and consequently, protected from enantioselective degradation. Metalaxyl leaching through soil columns was also enantioselective; the concentration of S-metalaxyl in all leachates collected was greater than that of R-metalaxyl. Despite being non-enantioselective, sorption influenced the enantioselectivity of metalaxyl leaching, as it determined the residence time of the fungicide within the soil column, and consequently, the extent and enantioselectivity of its degradation during leaching.

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Main Authors: Celis, R., Gámiz, B., Adelino, M. A., Hermosín, M.C., Cornejo, J.
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/80315
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spelling dig-irnas-es-10261-803152018-09-10T10:27:01Z Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils Celis, R. Gámiz, B. Adelino, M. A. Hermosín, M.C. Cornejo, J. Improving the existing knowledge on the enantioselectivity of processes affecting chiral pesticide enantiomers in the environment is necessary to maximize the efficacy and minimize the environmental impact caused by the use of pesticides with chiral properties. In this work, the enantioselectivity of the sorption, degradation, and leaching processes of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in three slightly alkaline, agricultural soils from southern Spain was studied. Batch sorption experiments indicated that the sorption of racemic-metalaxyl on soils, their clay (< 2 οm) fractions, and a number of model sorbents simulating naturally-occurring soil colloidal particles was non-enantioselective; the S-enantiomer was sorbed to the same extent as the R-enantiomer on all soil materials. Soil incubation experiments revealed that the R-enantiomer of metalaxyl was degraded faster than the S-enantiomer in all three soils, but the extent and enantioselectivity of metalaxyl degradation was soil-dependent, occurring more slowly and with less enantioselectivity in the fine-textured soil (soil 1) than in the coarse-textured soils (soils 2 and 3). For soils 2 and 3, S- and R-metalaxyl dissipation data were very well described by single first-order kinetics, whereas for soil 1 dissipation data were better fitted by two coupled first-order equations. It is suggested that sorption and entrapment of metalaxyl enantiomers in the abundant small-size pores of soil 1 (i.e., pore radius < 100 nm) could have resulted in a fraction of the fungicide of reduced bioavailability, and consequently, protected from enantioselective degradation. Metalaxyl leaching through soil columns was also enantioselective; the concentration of S-metalaxyl in all leachates collected was greater than that of R-metalaxyl. Despite being non-enantioselective, sorption influenced the enantioselectivity of metalaxyl leaching, as it determined the residence time of the fungicide within the soil column, and consequently, the extent and enantioselectivity of its degradation during leaching. Peer Reviewed 2013-07-30T09:14:46Z 2013-07-30T09:14:46Z 2013 2013-07-30T09:14:46Z artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 issn: 0048-9697 e-issn: 1879-1026 Science of the Total Environment 444: 288-297 (2013) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/80315 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.11.105 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.11.105 open Elsevier
institution IRNAS ES
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country España
countrycode ES
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tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IRNAS España
language English
description Improving the existing knowledge on the enantioselectivity of processes affecting chiral pesticide enantiomers in the environment is necessary to maximize the efficacy and minimize the environmental impact caused by the use of pesticides with chiral properties. In this work, the enantioselectivity of the sorption, degradation, and leaching processes of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in three slightly alkaline, agricultural soils from southern Spain was studied. Batch sorption experiments indicated that the sorption of racemic-metalaxyl on soils, their clay (< 2 οm) fractions, and a number of model sorbents simulating naturally-occurring soil colloidal particles was non-enantioselective; the S-enantiomer was sorbed to the same extent as the R-enantiomer on all soil materials. Soil incubation experiments revealed that the R-enantiomer of metalaxyl was degraded faster than the S-enantiomer in all three soils, but the extent and enantioselectivity of metalaxyl degradation was soil-dependent, occurring more slowly and with less enantioselectivity in the fine-textured soil (soil 1) than in the coarse-textured soils (soils 2 and 3). For soils 2 and 3, S- and R-metalaxyl dissipation data were very well described by single first-order kinetics, whereas for soil 1 dissipation data were better fitted by two coupled first-order equations. It is suggested that sorption and entrapment of metalaxyl enantiomers in the abundant small-size pores of soil 1 (i.e., pore radius < 100 nm) could have resulted in a fraction of the fungicide of reduced bioavailability, and consequently, protected from enantioselective degradation. Metalaxyl leaching through soil columns was also enantioselective; the concentration of S-metalaxyl in all leachates collected was greater than that of R-metalaxyl. Despite being non-enantioselective, sorption influenced the enantioselectivity of metalaxyl leaching, as it determined the residence time of the fungicide within the soil column, and consequently, the extent and enantioselectivity of its degradation during leaching.
format artículo
author Celis, R.
Gámiz, B.
Adelino, M. A.
Hermosín, M.C.
Cornejo, J.
spellingShingle Celis, R.
Gámiz, B.
Adelino, M. A.
Hermosín, M.C.
Cornejo, J.
Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
author_facet Celis, R.
Gámiz, B.
Adelino, M. A.
Hermosín, M.C.
Cornejo, J.
author_sort Celis, R.
title Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
title_short Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
title_full Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
title_fullStr Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
title_full_unstemmed Environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in Mediterranean agricultural soils
title_sort environmental behavior of the enantiomers of the chiral fungicide metalaxyl in mediterranean agricultural soils
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/80315
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AT adelinoma environmentalbehavioroftheenantiomersofthechiralfungicidemetalaxylinmediterraneanagriculturalsoils
AT hermosinmc environmentalbehavioroftheenantiomersofthechiralfungicidemetalaxylinmediterraneanagriculturalsoils
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