Science Inventory

CORRELATIONS BETWEEN PESTICIDE TRANSFORMATION RATE AND MICROBIAL RESPIRATION ACTIVITY IN SOIL OF DIFFERENT ECOSYSTEMS

Citation:

Jones, W J. AND N. D. Ananyeva. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN PESTICIDE TRANSFORMATION RATE AND MICROBIAL RESPIRATION ACTIVITY IN SOIL OF DIFFERENT ECOSYSTEMS. BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS 33(6):477-483, (2001).

Impact/Purpose:

Elucidate and model the underlying processes (physical, chemical, enzymatic, biological, and geochemical) that describe the species-specific transformation and transport of organic contaminants and nutrients in environmental and biological systems. Develop and integrate chemical behavior parameterization models (e.g., SPARC), chemical-process models, and ecosystem-characterization models into reactive-transport models.

Description:

Cecil sandy loam soils (ultisol) from forest (coniferous and deciduous), pasture, and arable ecosystems were sampled (0-10 cm) in the vicinity of Athens, GA, USA. Soil from each site was subdivided into three portions, consisting of untreated soil (control) as well as live and sterile samples treated with the fungicide metalaxyl and the herbicide propachlor at 10 mg kg-1 soil. Pesticide transformation rate, basal respiration (basal) and substrate-induced respiration (SIR) rates, and microbial metabolic quotient (qCO2) were measured for the initial application of metalaxyl [methyl-N-(2,6-dimethyl-phenyl)-N-(metoxyacetyl)-DL-alaninate] or propachlor (2-Chloro-N-isopropyl-acetanilide) at 22 C and 60% water holding capacity. Positive correlations were found for the following: metalaxyl transformation rate constant (Kmet) and basal (r=0.73); Kmet and SIR (r=0.83); propachlor transformation rate constant (Kpr) and basal (r=0.89); and Kpr and SIR (r=0.91). Regression analysis of pesticide transformation rate and soil respiration activity, coupled with specific soil properties (pH, Corg, and clay content), revealed a positive correlation between K and SIR for Corg (r=0.88 and 0.98, for metalaxyl and propachlor, respectively). qCO2s were not siginifcantly differenct (P=0.05) in propachlor-amended and pesticide-free soils. Metalaxyl amdendment resulted in a change in the ecophysiological status of the soil microbial community as expressed by qCO2. The qCO2 values in metalaxyl-amended soils were significantly greater (P=0.05) in pine forest (by 25%) and arable and pasture (by 20%) soils compared to unamended soils. Differences in qCO2 values may represent the magnitude of pesticide-induced disturbance. The duration of this disturbance was greater in the pine forest soil (48 days) compared to arable and pasture soils (21 and 15 days, respectively).

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:06/25/2001
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 64328