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Título

Sorption–desorption of flucarbazone and propoxycarbazone and their benzenesulfonamide and triazolinone metabolites in two soils

AutorKoskinen, W. C.; Calderón, M.J. CSIC ORCID; Rice, P. J.; Cornejo, J. CSIC ORCID
Palabras claveFlucarbazone
Propoxycarbazone
Sulfonylaminocarbonyltriazolinone
Metabolites
Benzenesulfonamide
Triazolinone
Sorption
Desorption
Aged residues
Fecha de publicaciónjul-2006
EditorWiley-Blackwell
CitaciónPest Management Science 62(7): 598–602 (2006)
ResumenSorption–desorption interactions of pesticides with soil determine the availability of pesticides in soil for transport, plant uptake and microbial degradation. These interactions are affected by the physical and chemical properties of the pesticide and soil and, for some pesticides, their residence time in the soil. While sorption–desorption of many herbicides has been characterised, very little work in this area has been done on herbicide metabolites. The objective of this study was to characterise sorption–desorption of two sulfonylaminocarbonyltriazolinone herbicides, flucarbazone and propoxycarbazone, and their benzenesulfonamide and triazolinone metabolites in two soils with different physical and chemical properties. Kf values for all four chemicals were greater in clay loam soil, which had higher organic carbon and clay contents than loamy sand. Kf−oc ranged from 29 to 119 for the herbicides and from 42 to 84 for the metabolites. Desorption was hysteretic in every case. Lower desorption in themore sorptive system might indicate that hysteresis can be attributed to irreversible binding of the molecules to soil surfaces. These data show the importance of characterisation of both sorption and desorption of herbicide residues in soil, particularly in the case of prediction of herbicide residue transport. In this case, potential transport of sulfonylaminocarbonyltriazolinone herbicidemetabolites would be overpredicted if parent chemical soil sorption values were used to predict transport.
Descripción5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, 17 references.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ps.1196
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/45991
DOI10.1002/ps.1196
ISSN1526-498X
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