Affiliation:
1. Shandong Engineering Research Center for Environment-Friendly Agricultural Pest Management, College of Plant Health and Medicine, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
Abstract
In agriculture, diphenyl ether herbicides are a broad-spectrum family of pesticides mainly used to control annual weeds in agriculture. Although diphenyl ether herbicides have a long-lasting effect in weed control, they can also be harmful to succeeding crops, as well as to the water and soil environment. Residual herbicides can also harm a large number of non-target organisms, leading to the death of pest predators and other beneficial organisms. Therefore, it is of great significance to control and remediate the contamination caused by diphenyl ether herbicide residues for the sake of environmental, nutritional, and biological safety. This review provides an overview of the techniques used for remediating diphenyl ether herbicide contamination, including biological, physical, and chemical remediation. Among these techniques, bioremediation, particularly microbial biodegradation technology, is extensively employed. The mechanisms and influencing factors of different remediation techniques in eliminating diphenyl ether herbicide contamination are discussed, together with a prospect for future development directions. This review serves as a scientific reference for the efficient remediation of residual contamination from diphenyl ether herbicides.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Reference78 articles.
1. Risk of pesticide pollution at the global scale;Tang;Nat. Geosci.,2021
2. Characterization of a novel oxyfluorfen-degrading bacterial strain Chryseobacterium aquifrigidense and its biochemical degradation pathway;Zhao;Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol.,2016
3. Liu, C.L. (2002). World Pesticide Compendium-Herbicide Manual, Chemical Industry Press.
4. Ecological correlation between the use of agricultural chemicals and biliary tract cancers in Japan;Yamamoyo;Acta Medica Biol.,1987
5. The diphenylether herbicide lactofen induces cell death and expression of defense-related genes in soybean;Graham;Plant Physiol.,2005