| Literature DB >> 28913582 |
Tianye Zheng1,2, Nora B Sutton3, Pim de Jager3, Richard Grosshans4, Sirajum Munira5, Annemieke Farenhorst5.
Abstract
Wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region of North America are integrated with farmland and contain mixtures of herbicide contaminants. Passive nonfacilitated diffusion is how most herbicides can move across plant membranes, making this perhaps an important process by which herbicide contaminants are absorbed by wetland vegetation. Prairie wetlands are dominated by native cattail (Typha latifolia) and hybrid cattail (Typha x glauca). The objective of this batch equilibrium study was to compare glyphosate absorption by the shoots and rhizomes of native versus hybrid cattails. Although it has been previously reported for some pesticides that passive diffusion is greater for rhizome than shoot components, this is the first study to demonstrate that the absorption capacity of rhizomes is species dependent, with the glyphosate absorption being significantly greater for rhizomes than shoots in case of native cattails, but with no significant differences in glyphosate absorption between rhizomes and shoots in case of hybrid cattails. Most importantly, glyphosate absorption by native rhizomes far exceeded that of the absorption occurring for hybrid rhizomes, native shoots and hybrid shoots. Glyphosate has long been used to manage invasive hybrid cattails in wetlands in North America, but hybrid cattail expansions continue to occur. Since our results showed limited glyphosate absorption by hybrid shoots and rhizomes, this lack of sorption may partially explain the poorer ability of glyphosate to control hybrid cattails in wetlands.Entities:
Keywords: Glyphosate; Hybrid cattail; Native cattail; Phytoremediation; Sorption; Wetland pollution
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28913582 PMCID: PMC5694517 DOI: 10.1007/s00128-017-2167-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Environ Contam Toxicol ISSN: 0007-4861 Impact factor: 2.151
Physical–chemical properties of glyphosate (Franz et al. 1997) and MCPA (Hiller et al. 2008)
| Herbicides | Molecular weight (g/mol) | Solubility in water at 25 °C (mg/L) | Octanol–water partition coefficient (log Kow) | Chemical structure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glyphosate | 169.1 | 12,000 | −3.40 |
|
| MCPA | 200.6 | 273.9 | −0.71 |
|
Fig. 1Time dependent sorption study of the plant-solution partition coefficient (Kpl) of glyphosate at the initial concentration of a 10 μg/L and b 1 mg/L; the Kpl values were calculated by taking the average of the triplicate and the error bars indicated the standard deviation; the letters obtained from statistical analysis indicate the significance between the Kpl values
Fig. 2Concentration dependent sorption study of a the plant-solution partition coefficient (Kpl) of glyphosate and b the plant-solution partition coefficient (Kpl) of MCPA after 48 h; the Kpl values were calculated by taking the average of the triplicate and the error bars indicated the standard deviation; the letters obtained from statistical analysis indicate the significance between the Kpl values
Glyphosate sorption parameters (K) determined for a range of sorbents
| Sorbent | K (L/kg) | Experimental conditions | Ref. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH | Temperature (°C) | Time (h) | Initial glyphosate (mg/L) | Solid/solution ratio (g/mL) | |||
| Native cattail rhizome | 25.3 and 20.4 | n/a | 5 | 48 | 0.01 and 1 | 0.2/15 | This study |
| Hybrid cattail rhizome | 6.5 and 6.4 | n/a | 5 | 48 | 0.01 and 1 | 0.2/15 | This study |
| Crop residue | 6.4–256 | 7.4 | 20 | n/a | 0.01 | 1/5.8 | Cassigneul et al. ( |
| Sandy loam soil | 0.6–78.5 | 4.83–10.4 | 22 | 24 | 0.03–67 | 0.5/10 | de Jonge and Wollesen de Jonge ( |
| Soil mixture | 40–303 | 5.2–8.1 | Room temperature | 16 | 2–10 | 10/50 | Autio et al. ( |
| Clay soil | 21–87 | 6.3–7.5 | Room temperature | 70 | 0.1–10 | 1/10 | Albers et al. ( |
| Clay minerals | 8–138 | 1.8–10.0 | Room temperature | 1 | 100–200 | 1/25 | Glass ( |
| Humic | 3–17 | 2–7 | Room temperature | 70 | 0.2–20 | 0.01/1 | Albers et al. ( |
| Woody biochar | 88 | 5 | Room temperature | 4 | 20 | 1/1000 | Mayakaduwa et al. ( |