4.7 Article

Dissipation of Fungicides in a Vineyard Soil Amended with Different Spent Mushroom Substrates

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 28, Pages 6936-6945

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf301322h

Keywords

fungicide; soil; spent mushroom substrate; degradation; mass balance; dehydrogenase activity

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [AGL2007-61674/AGR]
  2. Spain's Research Council (CSIC)
  3. FEDER-FSE

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The degradation kinetics and formation of metabolites for fungicides of different chemical classes (iprovalicarb, metalaxyl, penconazole, and pyrimethanil) and determination of bound residues for metalaxyl and penconazole were studied in both an unamended vineyard soil and in the same soil amended with two spent mushroom substrates (composted (C-SMS1) and fresh (F-SMS2)). The degradation kinetics was fitted to single first-order or first-order multicompartment patterns. Degradation rates decreased in C-SMS1-amended soils for all fungicides as compared to unamended soil, but in F-SMS2-amended soils, they decreased only for iprovalicarb and penconazole. The DT50 values were higher by up to 1.8 (metalaxyl), 3.8 (pyrimethanil), 4.1 (iprovalicarb), and >1000 (penconazole) times in the soil plus C-SMS1 compared to those for soil plus F-SMS2 or unamended soil. The dissipation mechanism recorded the highest mineralization in the unamended soil for C-14-metalaxyl and C-14-penconazole, with the highest formation of nonextractable residues in the F-SMS2-amended soil for C-14-metalaxyl. The results are consistent with (1) the chemical characteristics of each SMS (total and soluble organic carbon) controlling sorption and the bioavailability of fungicides and (2) the microbial activity of SMS-amended soils, which affects fungicide biodegradation. The findings of this work highlight the potential of SMS amendments with different characteristics to decrease or increase the degradation rate of a fungicide in a vineyard soil.

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