Methiozolin is a new turf herbicide controlling annual bluegrass in various cool- and warm-season turfgrasses. This study was conducted to investigate the fate of methiozolin in soil under aerobic and anaerobic flooded conditions using two radiolabeled tracers, [benzyl-(14)C]- and [isoxazole-(14)C]methiozolin. The mass balance of applied radioactivity ranged from 91.7 to 104.5% in both soil conditions. In the soil under the aerobic condition, [(14)C]methiozolin degraded with time to remain by 17.9 and 15.9% of the applied in soil at 120 days after treatment (DAT). [(14)C]Carbon dioxide and the nonextractable radioactivity increased as the soil aged to reach up to 41.5 and 35.7% for [benzyl-(14)C]methiozolin at 120 DAT, respectively, but 36.1 and 39.8% for [isoxazole-(14)C]methiozolin, respectively, during the same period. The nonextractable residue was associated more with humin and fulvic acid fractions under the aerobic condition. No significant volatile products or metabolites were detected during this study. The half-life of [(14)C]methiozolin was approximately 49 days in the soil under the aerobic condition; however, it could not be estimated in the soil under the anaerobic flooded condition because [(14)C]methiozolin degradation was limited. On the basis of these results, methiozolin is considered to undergo fast degradation by aerobic microbes, but not by anaerobic microbes in soil.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf400199u | DOI Listing |
BMC Plant Biol
December 2024
Punjab Agricultural University, Punjab, Ludhiana, 141004, India.
Background: Anaerobic germination is a critical trait for rice cultivation, particularly in regions that experience flooding or waterlogging immediately after sowing. Under direct-seeded conditions, where rice is sown directly into the field without prior transplantation, the ability of seeds to germinate in anaerobic (oxygen-deficient) conditions becomes essential for successful crop establishment. This trait is especially relevant in areas prone to waterlogging, were traditional methods of rice cultivation, such as puddled transplanting, may be less viable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2024
Department of Oriental Medicine Biotechnology, College of Life Science, Kyung Hee University, Yongin 17104, Republic of Korea. Electronic address:
Anthropogenic methane emissions from paddy cultivation contribute to greenhouse gas levels owing to the anaerobic conditions in flooded rice fields, which promotes the activity of methanogenic bacteria. This study explored bioremediation strategies to mitigate methane release through the application of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria combined with silicate in rice cultivation. Rice seeds were coated with Paenibacillus yonginensis DCY84, with and without the addition of silicate, prior to sowing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
December 2024
Plant Biotechnology, Faculty of Biology, University of Bielefeld, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany.
Oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) occurs naturally in many developing plant tissues but can become a major threat during acute flooding stress. Consequently, plants as aerobic organisms must rapidly acclimate to hypoxia and the associated energy crisis to ensure cellular and ultimately organismal survival. In plants, oxygen sensing is tightly linked with oxygen-controlled protein stability of group VII ETHYLENE-RESPONSE FACTORs (ERFVII), which, when stabilized under hypoxia, act as key transcriptional regulators of hypoxia-responsive genes (HRGs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
December 2024
Environmental Microbiology Laboratory, School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Plant Physiol
December 2024
Institute of Agricultural Biology and Biotechnology, CNR, National Research Council, 56124 Pisa, Italy.
Complex multicellular organisms have evolved in an oxygen-enriched atmosphere. Oxygen is therefore essential for all aerobic organisms, including plants, for energy production through cellular respiration. However, plants can experience hypoxia following extreme flooding events and also under aerated conditions in proliferative organs or tissues characterized by high oxygen consumption.
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