56 research outputs found
Atrazine dissipation in s-triazine-adapted and non-adapted soil from Colorado and Mississippi: implications of enhanced degradation on atrazine fate and transport parameters
Soil bacteria have developed novel metabolic abilities resulting
in enhanced atrazine degradation. Consequently, there is a need
to evaluate the eff ects of enhanced degradation on parameters
used to model atrazine fate and transport. Th e objectives of this
study were (i) to screen Colorado (CO) and Mississippi (MS)
atrazine-adapted and non-adapted soil for genes that code for
enzymes able to rapidly catabolize atrazine and (ii) to compare
atrazine persistence, Q10, β, and metabolite profi les between
adapted and non-adapted soils. Th e atzABC and/or trzN genes
were detected only in adapted soil. Atrazine\u2019s average half-life
in adapted soil was 10-fold lower than that of the non-adapted
soil and 18-fold lower than the USEPA estimate of 3 to 4 mo.
Q10 was greater in adapted soil. No diff erence in β was observed
between soils. Th e accumulation and persistence of mono-Ndealkylated
metabolites was lower in adapted soil; conversely,
under suboptimal moisture levels in CO adapted soil,
hydroxyatrazine concentrations exceeded 30% of the parent
compounds\u2019 initial mass. Results indicate that (i) enhanced
atrazine degradation and atzABC and/or trzN genes are likely
widespread across the Western and Southern corn-growing
regions of the USA; (ii) persistence of atrazine and its mono-
N-dealkylated metabolites is signifi cantly reduced in adapted
soil; (iii) hydroxyatrazine can be a major degradation product
in adapted soil; and (iv) fate, transport, and risk assessment
models that assume historic atrazine degradation pathways and
persistence estimates will likely overpredict the compounds\u2019
transport potential in adapted soil
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