期刊
PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
卷 70, 期 1, 页码 148-155出版社
WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/ps.3540
关键词
hydrophilic agrochemicals; hypocotyl; penetration; permselective; pores; radius
BackgroundAerial plant surfaces are covered by a lipophilic cuticular membrane (CM) that restricts the transport of water and small solutes. Non-aerial tissues do not exhibit such a barrier. Recent data have shown that large relative to CM hydrophilic agrochemicals were able to pass at high rates through the non-aerial coleoptile. ResultsA moderately large hydrophilic solute like PEG 1000 with a mean molar volume of 782 cm(3) mol(-1) was rejected by the non-aerial hypocotyl. Uptake of smaller solutes like urea (46.5 cm(3) mol(-1)) was fast and with 99% after 1 day. Cut-off size estimations suggest a pore size diameter below 1.5 nm. ConclusionAerial and non-aerial CM differ largely in their absolute barrier properties. This difference is related to the absence of embedded cuticular waxes in the non-aerial hypocotyl membrane, which make the CM physically dense and cause low solubility of hydrophilic solutes. The free volume for diffusion at the interface of the non-aerial hypocotyl cuticle to the environment is much larger resulting in higher penetration rates. It is suggested that diffusion through the non-aerial hypocotyl does not proceed in a real channel system with continuous aqueous phase but is more like transport through a filter with restricted diffusion in the pore openings. (c) 2013 Society of Chemical Industry
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