4.6 Article

Biodegradation of Fipronil: Transformation Products, Microbial Characterisation and Toxicity Assessment

Journal

WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION
Volume 232, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-021-05071-w

Keywords

Fipronil; Soil; Oxic and anoxic biodegradation; Sphingomonas and Clostridiales; CALUX assay

Funding

  1. BE-Basic Foundation grant from the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
  2. Brazilian FAPESP organization [2012/51496-3]
  3. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel -CAPES

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The degradation of Fipronil in Brazilian soil under oxic and anoxic conditions showed that different types of microbial communities were involved in the degradation process, leading to varying concentrations and degradation rates of specific metabolites.
Fipronil is a highly active, broad spectrum insecticide with increasing and wide use. The degradation of fipronil was studied in Brazilian soil under oxic and anoxic conditions. Under oxic conditions, the half-life of fipronil was 16.9 days, with fipronil sulfone as the main metabolite, and no further degradation during 30 days of incubation. This degradation was accompanied by an increase of bacterial and archaeal ammonia oxidizers, as well as denitrifiers, and microorganisms related to Sphingomonas. Under anoxic conditions, a half-life of 15.7 days for fipronil was obtained, with fipronil sulphide as the primary metabolite, and fipronil sulfone at lower concentrations, with no further degradation of these metabolites during 90 days of incubation. In these conditions, complete degradation of fipronil was accompanied by an increase of denitrifiers, iron-reducers and ammonia oxidizers and selection of microorganisms that are related to uncultured Clostridiales (family VIII). Sulphate reducers and methanogens and most of the microbial community were not affected by fipronil and its metabolites. Toxicity evaluation, using in vitro effect-based CALUX assays confirmed that the metabolites have a similar toxic potency as compared to the parent compound fipronil. Therefore, the potential (eco)toxicity of fipronil does not seem to decrease upon microbial degradation.

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