Occurrence and ecological risks of flonicamid and its metabolites in multiple substrates from intensive rice-vegetable rotations in tropical China.

Sci Total Environ

Environment and Plant Protection Institute, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, PR China; National Agricultural Experimental Station for Agricultural Environment, Danzhou 571737, PR China; Hainan Engineering Research Center for Non-point Source and Heavy Metal Pollution Control, Danzhou 571737, PR China.

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rice-vegetable rotations are common in tropical agriculture, but the effects and risks of the insecticide flonicamid (FLO) and its degradates (FLOMs) in these systems are not well understood.
  • This study measured FLOMs concentrations in plants, soil, water, and sediments across 28 rotations, finding that plants had the highest concentrations, especially in peppers.
  • The research also revealed that different agricultural practices, substrate qualities, and climatic conditions influenced the levels and risks of FLOMs, with overall contamination risks being low but higher in soils and during specific vegetable planting periods.

Article Abstract

Rice-vegetable rotations are dominant in (sub)-tropical agriculture worldwide. However, fate and risks of the insecticide flonicamid (FLO) and its main degradates (collectively called FLOMs) in multiple substrates from those cropping systems remain largely unknown. In this study, we characterized residual concentrations, driving factors, transport, and potential ecological risks of FLOMs in different substrates in 28 tropical rice-vegetable rotations. Concentrations (median) of FLOMs were 0.013-3.03 (0.42) ng g in plants, 0.012-1.92 (0.23) ng g in soil, 0.029-0.63 (0.126) μg L in water, and 0.002-0.398 (0.055) ng g in sediments. Flonicamid and its metabolite N-(4-trifluoromethylnicotinoyl) glycine were the dominant species in the four substrates (84.1 % to 88.5 %). Plants had the highest levels of FLOMs, with the highest bioconcentration factor in peppers. According to boosted regression trees coupled with a partial least squares structural equation model, levels and composition of FLOMs showed high spatiotemporal and crop-related patterns in different substrates, with patterns highly codetermined by agricultural practices (e.g., crop type and FLO/neonicotinoid/pyrethroid applications), substrate parameters (e.g., pH, organic matter or total organic carbon), and climate features (e.g., wet/dry seasons). Moreover, a fugacity method indicated differences in transport and partitioning patterns in different substrates during rice and vegetable planting periods. Integrated substrate risk assessment of FLOMs contamination was conducted based on species-sensitive distributions and substrate weight index. Although overall risks of FLOM contamination in tropical rice-vegetable rotations were negligible to low, the highest risks were in soils, vegetable planting periods, and a central intensively planted area.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165571DOI Listing

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