4.8 Article

(Bio)degradation of glyphosate in water-sediment microcosms - A stable isotope co-labeling approach

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 99, Issue -, Pages 91-100

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2016.04.041

Keywords

13C(3)(15)N-Glyphosate; AMPA; Sarcosine; Amino acids; Biogenic residues

Funding

  1. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ
  2. German Research Council (DFG) [980/1-1, Scha 390/13-1]
  3. Chinese Scholarship Council

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Glyphosate and its metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) are frequently detected in water and sediments. Up to date, there are no comprehensive studies on the fate of glyphosate in water-sediment microcosms according to OECD 308 guideline. Stable isotope co-labeled 13C(3)(15)N-glyphosate was used to determine the turnover mass balance, formation of metabolites, and formation of residues over a period of 80 days. In the water-sediment system, 56% of the initial C-13(3)-glyphosate equivalents was ultimately mineralized, whereas the mineralization in the water system (without sediment) was low, reaching only 2% of(13)C-glyphosate equivalents. This finding demonstrates the key role of sediments in its degradation. Glyphosate was detected below detection limit in the water compartment on day 40, but could still be detected in the sediments, ultimately reaching 5% of (C3N)-C-13-N-15-glyphosate equivalents. A rapid increase in (CN)-C-13-N-15-AMPA was noted after 10 days, and these transformation products ultimately constituted 26% of the C-13(3)-glyphosate equivalents and 79% of the N-15-glyphosate equivalents. In total, 10% of the C-13 label and 12% of the N-15 label were incorporated into amino acids, indicating no risk bearing biogenic residue formation from (C3N)-C-13-N-15-glyphosate. Initially, glyphosate was biodegraded via the sarcosine pathway related to microbial growth, as shown by co-labeled (CN)-C-13-N-15-glycine and biogenic residue formation. Later, degradation via AMPA dominated under starvation conditions, as shown by the contents of C-13-glycine. The presented data provide the first evidence of the speciation of the non extractable residues as well as the utilization of glyphosate as a carbon and nitrogen source in the water-sediment system. This study also highlights the contribution of both the sarcosine and the AMPA degradation pathways under these conditions. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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