| Literature DB >> 28424754 |
Michael Matthies1, Sabine Beulke2.
Abstract
Simulation degradation studies for industrial chemicals, biocidal products and plant protection products are required in the EU to estimate half-lives in soil, water and sediment for the comparison to persistence criteria for hazard (P/vP) assessment, and for use in exposure assessments. There is a discrepancy between European regulatory approaches regarding the temperature at which degradation half-lives should be (1) measured in simulation degradation testing of environmental compartments, and (2) compared to the P/vP criteria. In this paper, an opinion is provided on the options for the experimental temperature and extrapolation to other conditions. A review of the historical development of persistence criteria did not give conclusive evidence of the temperature at which the half-lives that underpin the P-criteria were measured, but room temperature is likely. Half-lives measured at 20 °C are in line with the intentions of some international agreements, but in the EU there is a continued political debate regarding the relevant temperature for comparison with persistence criteria. Measuring degradation at 20 °C has the advantage that metabolites/transformation products can be identified with greater accuracy, and that kinetic fits to determine half-lives for parent compounds and metabolites carry less uncertainty. Extrapolation of half-lives to lower temperatures is possible for assessing environmental exposure, but the uncertainty of the persistence classification is smaller when measured half-lives are used for direct comparison with P/vP criteria, without extrapolation. Model simulations demonstrate the pattern of concentrations that can be expected for realistic worst case climate scenarios in the EU based on the half-life of 120 days in soil at 20 °C and of 40 days in water at 20 °C, and their temporal and spatial variability.Entities:
Keywords: Arrhenius equation; Degradation simulation testing; Environmental temperature; Exposure assessment; Hazard; PBT assessment; Persistence criteria; Temperature normalisation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28424754 PMCID: PMC5380697 DOI: 10.1186/s12302-017-0113-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Eur ISSN: 2190-4715 Impact factor: 5.893
Criteria for the classification as P or vP [23]
| Criteria for persistence (P) | Criteria for very persistent (vP) |
|---|---|
| Marine water: | Water: |
Fig. 1Concentration of a PPP with a half-life of 120 days at 20 °C in soil calculated for the EFSA soil scenarios in the Northern, Central and Southern Regulatory Zones [18, 20] for annual (top panel) and triennial application (bottom panel)
Fig. 2Mass of a PPP with a half-life of 40 days in water and 120 days in sediment at 20 °C calculated for the FOCUS surface water scenarios La Jailliere (top panels) and Thiva (bottom panels) for water (left panels) and sediment (right panels)
Fig. 3Measured residues of a PPP in soil at two temperatures (symbols) and optimised decline curves (lines), with 95% confidence intervals of the optimised half-life in brackets