4.8 Article

Phase Transfer and Biodegradation of Pesticides in Water-Sediment Systems Explored by Compound-Specific Isotope Analysis and Conceptual Modeling

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 8, Pages 4720-4728

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c06283

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Rhine-Meuse Water Agency (AERM) [170293]
  2. French National Research Agency ANR [ANR-18-CE32-0007]
  3. Region Grand Est (France)
  4. AERM (France)

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Current approaches are often limited to evaluating the contribution of pesticide dissipation processes in water-sediment systems. Compound-specific isotope analysis emphasized the importance of pesticide degradation in the water phase. Combining CSIA with high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry for the identification of transformation products can improve the interpretation of pesticide dissipation in water-sediment systems.
Current approaches are often limited to evaluating the contribution of pesticide dissipation processes in water-sediment systems as both degradation and phase transfer, that is, sorption-desorption, contribute to the apparent decrease of pesticide concentration. Here, the dissipation of widely used herbicides acetochlor and S-metolachlor was examined in laboratory by water-sediment microcosm experiments under oxic and anoxic conditions. Compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA) emphasized insignificant carbon isotope fractionation in the sediment, indicating prevailing pesticide degradation in the water phase. Conceptual modeling accounting for phase transfer and biodegradation indicated that biodegradation may be underestimated when phase transfer is not included. Phase transfer does not affect carbon isotope fractionation for a wide spectrum of molecules and environmental conditions, underscoring the potential of pesticide CSIA as a robust approach to evaluate degradation in water-sediment systems. CSIA coupled with the identification of transformation products by high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry suggests the degradation of acetochlor and S-metolachlor to occur via nucleophilic substitution and the predominance of oxalinic acids as transformation products under both anoxic and oxic conditions. Altogether, combining the pesticide CSIA, the identification of transformation products, and the use of conceptual phase-transfer models improves the interpretation of pesticide dissipation in water-sediment systems.

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