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a Dep. of Soil, Water and Climate, St. Paul, MN USA
b Soil and Water Management Research Unit, USDA-ARS, 1991 Upper Buford Circle, 439 Borlaug Hall, St. Paul, MN 55108 USA
koskinen{at}soils.umn.edu
The reversibility of pesticide sorptiondesorption in soil is of fundamental importance in the understanding of the fate of these agrochemicals in the environment. We used an isotopic exchange method to characterize the irreversibility of the sorptiondesorption process of the insecticide imidacloprid (1-[(6-chloro-3-pyridinyl)-methyl]-Nnitro-2-imidazolidinimine) and its degradation product imidacloprid-urea (1-[(6-chloro-3-pyridinyl)-methyl]-2-imidazolidinone) on a silty clay loam (SiCL) soil, and that of the metabolite imidacloprid-guanidine (1-[6-chloro-3-pyridinyl)methyl]-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-amine) on a loamy sand (LS) soil. The exchange between 12C-pesticide molecules and 14C-labeled pesticide molecules in soil suspensions preequilibrated for 24 h was monitored and indicated that a fraction of the sorbed chemicals was resistant to desorption. A two-compartment model was applied to describe the experimental sorption data points of the sorption isotherms as the sum of a reversible component and a nondesorbable, irreversible component. The quantitative estimation of the irreversible and reversible components of sorption, experimentally derived from isotopic exchange experiments, indicated degree of irreversibility (percentage irreversibly bound) in the order: imidaclopridSiCL soil (632%) < imidacloprid ureaSiCL soil (1523%) < imidacloprid guanidineLS soil (3251%), with greater irreversibility at lower pesticide concentration. Increasing the preequilibration time and decreasing pH in the imidaclopridSiCL soil system resulted in increased sorption irreversibility. The irreversible component of sorption determined by the isotopic exchange technique also allowed accurate prediction of the sorptiondesorption hysteretic behavior during successive desorption cycles for all three soilpesticide systems studied. The isotopic exchange technique appears to be a suitable method to quantitatively characterize pesticide desorption from soil, allowing prediction of hysteresis during sorptiondesorption experiments.
Abbreviations: LS, loamy sand SiCL, silty clay loam
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