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Conazole fungicides epoxiconazole and tebuconazole in biochar amended soils: Degradation and bioaccumulation in earthworms. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biochar is increasingly recognized for improving soil properties in agriculture, but it also affects how pesticides interact with soil organisms and their degradation.
  • This study focuses on how two fungicides (epoxiconazole and tebuconazole) degrade and accumulate in earthworms when added to soils with different sorption capacities and amended with varying amounts of biochar.
  • Findings indicate that biochar enhances fungicides' degradation, with effects influenced by the type of soil and biochar, while bioaccumulation is higher in low-sorbing soils and decreases with more biochar, showing the complexity of pesticide behavior in soil-biochar mixtures.

Article Abstract

Biochar usage in agriculture becomes increasingly important for the improvement of soil properties. However, from the perspective of pesticides, biochar can influence exposure to pesticides of both target and non-target organisms and also pesticides' fate in soil. Our study investigated degradation and bioaccumulation (in the Eisenia andrei earthworm) of two conazole fungicides, epoxiconazole and tebuconazole, added to high- and low-sorbing soils (by means of fungicides' sorption measured beforehand) amended with low-, moderate- and high-sorbing biochars at 0.2% and 2% doses. We aimed to investigate the effects of contrasting soil and biochar properties, different doses of biochar in soil-biochar mixtures, and different compounds on the degradation and bioaccumulation. We also wanted to explore if the beforehand determined sorption of fungicides on individual soils and biochars is manifested somehow in their degradation and/or bioaccumulation in soil-biochar mixtures. The biochars' presence in the soils promoted the degradation of fungicides with a clear effect of dose and soil, but less clear effect of biochar or compound. The bioaccumulation factors were higher in low-sorbing soil variants and also decreased with increasing biochar dose. For low-sorbing soil variants, the bioaccumulation was also influenced by the type of biochar corresponding to its sorbing potential and the possible effect on the bioavailability of the fungicides. Our results show that mixing of biochars with soils changes the fate and bioaccumulation of the conazole fungicides. However, the sorption results from original materials are not straightforwardly manifested in the more complex soil-biota system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.129700DOI Listing

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