Dissipation and sorption-desorption of benzisothiazolinone in agricultural soils and identification of its metabolites
Benzisothiazolinone has been widely used to control bacterial and fungal diseases in various agricultural crops by destroying the nuclear structure and interfering with the metabolism of microbial cells. In this study, the dissipation, transformation and sorption-desorption of benzisothiazolinone (...
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Veröffentlicht in: | RSC advances 2021-02, Vol.11 (1), p.5399-541 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Benzisothiazolinone has been widely used to control bacterial and fungal diseases in various agricultural crops by destroying the nuclear structure and interfering with the metabolism of microbial cells. In this study, the dissipation, transformation and sorption-desorption of benzisothiazolinone (
BIT
) in five soils were investigated to evaluate its environmental fate. Results showed that the degradation of
BIT
in all the tested soils fitted the first order kinetics and increased with soil organic matter (OM) content. Degradation differences between unsterilized natural and sterilized soils (
t
1/2
= 0.09-26.66 and 6.80-86.64 d) suggested that
BIT
degradation is primarily driven by biological processes and assisted by abiotic degradation. Additionally,
BIT
dissipated fastest in flooded soils (
t
1/2
= 0.20-4.53 d), indicating that anaerobic microorganisms are more likely to degrade
BIT
compared to aerobic microbes. Also, during the soil degradation process, two metabolites were monitored and identified for the first time.
BIT
sorption was a spontaneous physical process with no desorption hysteresis effect, which fit the Freundlich model.
BIT
causes relatively strong sorption (log
K
OC
= 3.76-4.19) and low persistence in soils, thus exhibiting a low potential risk for groundwater contamination.
Dissipation and sorption-desorption of benzisothiazolinone in five soils were investigated; two metabolites were monitored and identified for the first time. |
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ISSN: | 2046-2069 2046-2069 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d0ra09553b |