Author:
Sparling Graham,Dragten Robert,Aislabie Jackie,Fraser Rhonda
Abstract
The mineralisation of 14C-ring-labelled atrazine to
14CO2 was measured in 3
contrasting New Zealand soils under controlled conditions of temperature and
moisture. The numbers of atrazine-degrading organisms were measured by a most
probable number technique. Decomposition rates were slow, with a maximum of
41% of atrazine being mineralised over 263 days. Mineralisation was
generally very low in subsoils and was much reduced by low moisture content.
However, one subsoil from 60–90 cm depth had unusually high numbers of
atrazine-degrading microbes and showed mineralisation greater than or
equivalent to the surface soil. Mineralisation was approximately doubled by a
10°C rise in temperature over the range 16–28°C. In general, the
rate of atrazine mineralisation over 7–96 days could be predicted from
the number of atrazine-degrading microbes and the cation exchange capacity of
the soil (R2 =
0·86). A large amount (54–77%) of
14C remained in the soil as non-extractable residues
after 263 days, but only trace amounts of the added atrazine or the
decomposition products de-ethyl atrazine and de-isopropyl atrazine were
detected by extraction in organic solvent.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
35 articles.
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