Measuring the photostability of agrochemicals on leaves: understanding the balance between loss processes and foliar uptake

Author:

Bronzato Maddalena1,Burriss Adam1,King Nikita1,Donaldson Claire1,Sayer Danielle1,Baker Christopher M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Syngenta, Jealott's Hill International Research Centre Bracknell UK

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDPhotostability is an important property in agrochemicals, impacting their biological efficacy, environmental fate and registrability. As such, it is a property that is routinely measured during the development of new active ingredients and their formulations. To make these measurements, compounds are typically exposed to simulated sunlight after application to a glass substrate. While useful, these measurements neglect key factors that influence photostability under true field conditions. Most importantly, they neglect the fact that compounds are applied to living plant tissue, and that uptake and movement within this tissue provides a mechanism to protect compounds from photodegradation.RESULTSIn this work, we introduce a new photostability assay incorporating leaf tissue as a substrate, designed to run at medium throughput under standardized laboratory conditions. Using three test cases, we demonstrate that our leaf‐disc‐based assays provides quantitatively different photochemical loss profiles to an assay employing a glass substrate. And we also demonstrate that these different loss profiles are intimately linked to the physical properties of the compounds, the effect that those properties have on foliar uptake and, thereby, the availability of the active ingredient on the leaf surface.CONCLUSIONSThe method presented provides a quick and simple measure of the interplay between abiotic loss processes and foliar uptake, supplying additional information to facilitate the interpretation of biological efficacy data. The comparison of loss between glass slides and leaves also provides a better understanding of when intrinsic photodegradation is likely to be a good model for a compound's behaviour under field conditions. © 2023 Society of Chemical Industry.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,General Medicine

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