Aquatic photolysis of strobilurin fungicide kresoxim-methyl: kinetics, pathways, and effects of adjuvants

Literature Information

Publication Date 2024-01-02
DOI 10.1039/D3NJ05471C
Impact Factor 3.591
Authors

Xuewei Zhang, Jing Ye, Zhigang Ni, Xuerui Yang, Yuefei Ji, Jean-Marc Chovelon


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Abstract

Kresoxim-methyl (KM), an extensively used strobilurin fungicide, displays broad-spectrum fungicidal activity. Despite its prevalent application in agriculture and frequent detection in the environment, specific studies on the photolytic fate of KM in natural surface waters are quite limited. To address this, the present study delves into the photochemical transformation of KM under light irradiation using a high-pressure mercury lamp. Photodegradation of KM followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, with a degradation rate constant of 0.067 ± 0.005 h−1, corresponding to a half-life of approximately 10.3 ± 0.7 h, and the quantum yield was estimated to be 6.95 × 10−3. Transient species identification experiments demonstrated the involvement of singlet oxygen (1O2) and singlet (1KM*) and triplet (3KM*) states. Four different photodegradation pathways, i.e., photoisomerization, hydrolysis, hydroxylation, and ether cleavage, were proposed. Toxicity assessments demonstrated that photodegradation effectively reduced the ecotoxicity of KM. Two typical pesticide adjuvants, namely, Tween 20 and sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDBS), were selected to evaluate their impacts on KM photolysis. While Tween 20 exhibited a remarkable increase in the photodegradation of KM, SDBS showed a concentration dependent behavior, with an inhibitory effect at low concentrations (<200 μM) and promotional effects at higher concentration levels. The present study elucidated the photolytic KM degradation mechanism, as well as its possible inhibition and enhancement, which is of significant importance for evaluating the environmental fate and ecotoxicological risks of KM in sunlit surface waters.

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New Journal of Chemistry

New Journal of Chemistry
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NJC (New Journal of Chemistry) is a broad-based primary journal encompassing all branches of chemistry and its sub-disciplines. It contains full research articles, communications, perspectives and focus articles. This well-established journal, owned by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) of France, has been co-published with the Royal Society of Chemistry since January 1998. NJC is the forum for the publication of high-quality, original and significant work that opens new directions in chemistry or other scientific disciplines. In addition to having a significant chemical component, work published in NJC must demonstrate that it will have an impact on areas of research other than that of the reported work.

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