Environmental disappearance of acetochlor and its bioavailability to weed: A general prototype for reduced herbicide application instruction

Chemosphere. 2021 Feb:265:129108. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.129108. Epub 2020 Nov 26.

Abstract

The consecutive application of herbicide acetochlor has resulted in the widespread drug resistance of weeds and the high risks to environment and human health. To assess environmental behaviors and minimal dosage of acetochlor application in the realistic soil, we systematically investigated the acetochlor adsorption/desorption, mobility, leaching, degradation, weed bioavailability and lethal dosage of acetochlor in three soil types including Nanjing (NJ), Yancheng (YC) and Yingtan (YT). Under the same conditions (60% moisture and darkness), acetochlor had a half-life of disappearance 3 days in NJ, 4.9 days in YC and 25.7 days in YT soils. The HRLC-Q-TOF-MS/MS analyses identified ten metabolites and eight conjugates generated through dealkylation, hydroxylation, thiol conjugation and glycosylation pathways. The acetochlor adsorption to soils ranked in the order of YT > YC > NJ and was committed to the Freundlich model. By examining the effects of soil moisture, microbial activity, illumination/darkness, etc. on acetochlor degradation in soils, we showed that the chemical metabolisms could undergo multiple processes through soil microbial degradation, hydrolysis or photolysis-mediated mechanisms. The longitudinal migration assay revealed that acetochlor leaching ability in the three soils was YT > YC > NJ, which was negatively associated with the order of adsorption behavior. Four kinds of weed were grown in the acetochlor-contaminated NJ soil. The lethal concentrations for the weed plantlets were 0.16-0.3 mg/kg, much lower than the dosage of realistic field application. Overall, our work provided novel insights into the mechanism for acetochlor behaviors in soils, the natural degradation process in the environment, and the lethal concentration to the tested weed plants.

Keywords: Acetochlor; Application reduction; Degradation; Migration; Weed annihilation.

MeSH terms

  • Biological Availability
  • Herbicides* / analysis
  • Herbicides* / toxicity
  • Humans
  • Soil
  • Soil Pollutants* / analysis
  • Soil Pollutants* / toxicity
  • Tandem Mass Spectrometry
  • Toluidines / analysis
  • Toluidines / toxicity

Substances

  • Herbicides
  • Soil
  • Soil Pollutants
  • Toluidines
  • acetochlor