AI Article Synopsis

  • The research investigates the environmental impacts of different organic cations combined with the herbicide dicamba, focusing on a strategy called 'herbicidal ionic liquids' (HILs).
  • Toxicity tests were conducted on various microorganisms and crustaceans, revealing that the structure of the cations significantly influences toxicity levels, with natural ions being much less toxic compared to synthetic ones.
  • The study highlights the transformation of betaine-type cations into less harmful substances over time, challenging current understanding of ionic liquids in herbicides and drawing parallels to toxicity concerns in traditional herbicide formulations.

Article Abstract

The following research provides novel and relevant insights into potential environmental consequences of combination of various organic cations with commercial systemic herbicide (dicamba), in accordance with a 'herbicidal ionic liquids' (HILs) strategy. Toxicity assays of five dicamba-based HILs comprising different hydrophobic and hydrophilic cations, namely choline [CHOL][DIC], ethyl betainate [BETC][DIC], decyl betainate [BETC][DIC], hexadecyl betainate [BETC][DIC] and didecyldimethylammonium [DDA][DIC]), have been tested towards bacteria (Pseudomonas putida, Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis), algae (Chlorella vulgaris), fresh and marine water crustaceans (Daphnia magna, Artemia franciscana). The structure of respective substituents in the cation emerged as a decisive determinant of toxicity in the case of tested species. In consequence, small ions of natural origin ([CHOL] and [BETC]) demonstrated toxicity numerous orders of magnitude lower compared to fully synthetic [DDA]. These results emphasize the role of cations' hydrophobicity, as well as origin, in the observed acute toxic effect. Time-dependent toxicity assays also indicated that betaine-type cations comprising an ester bond can rapidly transform into less harmful substances, which can generally result in a reduction in toxicity by even several orders of magnitude. Nonetheless, these findings challenge the concept of ionic liquids with herbicidal activity and give apparent parallels to adjuvant-dependent toxicity issues recently noted in typical herbicidal formulations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171062DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The research investigates the environmental impacts of different organic cations combined with the herbicide dicamba, focusing on a strategy called 'herbicidal ionic liquids' (HILs).
  • Toxicity tests were conducted on various microorganisms and crustaceans, revealing that the structure of the cations significantly influences toxicity levels, with natural ions being much less toxic compared to synthetic ones.
  • The study highlights the transformation of betaine-type cations into less harmful substances over time, challenging current understanding of ionic liquids in herbicides and drawing parallels to toxicity concerns in traditional herbicide formulations.
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