4.7 Article

Laboratory and field dissipation of penoxsulam, tricyclazole and profoxydim in rice paddy systems

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 91, Issue 7, Pages 1049-1057

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2013.01.067

Keywords

Penoxsulam; Profoxydim; Tricyclazole; Dissipation; Paddy water; Paddy soil

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Rice cultivation relies on pesticide applications to ensure high yields. However, the regular use of pesticides seriously affects the quality of neighboring surface water systems. Thus complete knowledge of the environmental fate and dissipation of pesticides in the paddy rice environment should become available. So far only a few studies have provided comprehensive assessment of the dissipation of pesticides under the submerged cultivation conditions followed in rice. Thus, laboratory and 2-year field studies were performed to assess the dissipation of two new generation rice herbicides (penoxsulam and profoxydim) and one of the most important rice fungicides (tricyclazole). A good agreement between laboratory and field experiments was observed with a faster dissipation of penoxsulam and tricyclazole under field conditions. Profoxydim was the least persistent chemical (DT50 soil < 1d; DT50 water 0.5-1.2 d), followed by penoxsulam which persisted for longer particularly in the water compartment (DT50water = 3.8-5.9 d). Tricyclazole was the most persistent pesticide, especially in the soil compartment with DT50 values of 44.5-84.6 (field) and 197 d (laboratory). These results could be utilized for the assessment of the environmental risk associated with the use of those pesticides in rice cultivation and the determination of potential mitigation measures for minimizing the risk for contamination of neighboring natural water resources. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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