| Literature DB >> 33321360 |
Zhiwei Wang1, Shanshan Di1, Peipei Qi1, Hao Xu1, Huiyu Zhao1, Xinquan Wang2.
Abstract
Repeated spraying of fungicides is a common phenomenon in greenhouse strawberry cultivation, and the continuous harvest of strawberries makes them prone to contamination by accumulated fungicides. Despite this, very few residue safety assessments of fungicides on greenhouse strawberries are conducted after repeated spraying of fungicides, and no research exists on fungicide dissipation and accumulation mechanism. Therefore, the present study investigated the dissipation and accumulation of four fungicides (pyraclostrobin, pyrimethanil, procymidone, and cyprodinil) after two typical repeated sprayings (a single fungicide repeated spraying and two fungicides sprayed using an alternate repeated technique). The half-life of pyraclostrobin after three single repeated sprayings was 18 d; however, its average half-life decreased to 9 d after alternate repeated spraying with cyprodinil. The shortened half-life may be attributed to cyprodinil water solution washing during alternate repeated spraying. The other three fungicides showed similar half-lives after single and alternate repeated spraying, following the order of cyprodinil (12 d and 10 d) > procymidone (11 d and 10 d) > pyrimethanil (6 d and 7 d). The octanol-water partition coefficient was a more efficient indicator of the half-life order of the fungicides than vapor pressure and water solubility. Pyraclostrobin showed the highest deposition efficiency but negligible residue accumulation; further, the residue accumulation of the four fungicides followed the order of procymidone > cyprodinil > pyrimethanil > pyraclostrobin after both single and alternate repeated spraying. A safety assessment demonstrated that the maximum number of times cyprodinil could be sprayed after single spraying was one; however, this number doubled after alternate spraying. The risk of exceeding the maximum residue limits of the fungicides on greenhouse strawberries decreased; however, the combined dietary risks of fungicides after alternate spraying might be high. Alternate repeated spraying of procymidone and pyrimethanil may be the optimal repeated spraying combination for greenhouse strawberries.Entities:
Keywords: Accumulation; Dissipation; Fungicides; Greenhouse strawberry; Repeated spraying; Risk assessment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33321360 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963