Tracking atrazine degradation in soil combining 14C-mineralisation assays and compound-specific isotope analysis

被引:1
作者
Gallego, Sara [1 ]
Sungthong, Rungroch [2 ]
Guyot, Benoît [2 ]
Saphy, Adrien [2 ]
Devers-Lamrani, Marion [1 ]
Martin-Laurent, Fabrice [1 ]
Imfeld, Gwenaël [2 ]
机构
[1] INRAE, Institut Agro Dijon, Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Agroécologie Dijon
[2] Institut Terre et Environnement de Strasbourg, Université de Strasbourg/EOST/ENGEES, CNRS UMR 7063, Strasbourg
关键词
Atrazine; Bioaugmentation; CSIA; Degradation; Herbicide; Mineralisation; Soil;
D O I
10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.142981
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The quantification of pesticide dissipation in agricultural soil is challenging. In this study, we investigated atrazine biodegradation in both liquid and soil experiments bioaugmented with distinct atrazine-degrading bacterial isolates. This was achieved by combining 14C-mineralisation assays and compound-specific isotope analysis of atrazine. In liquid experiments, the three bacterial isolates mineralised over 40% of atrazine, demonstrating their potential for extensive degradation. However, the kinetics of mineralisation and degradation varied among the isolates. Carbon stable isotope fractionation was similar for Pseudomonas isolates ADPT34 and ADP2T0, but slightly higher for Chelatobacter SR27. In soil experiments, atrazine primarily degraded into atrazine-desethyl, while atrazine-hydroxy was mainly observed in experiments with SR27. Atrazine mineralisation in soil by ADPT34 and SR27 exceeded 40%, whereas ADP2T0 exhibited a mineralisation rate of 10%. In experiments with ADPT34 and SR27, atrazine 14C-residues were predominantly found in the non-extractable fraction, whereas they accumulated in the extractable fraction in the experiment with ADP2T0. Compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA) relies on changes of stable isotope ratios and holds potential to evaluate herbicide transformation in soil. CSIA of atrazine indicated atrazine biodegradation in water and solvent extractable soil fractions and varied between 29% and 52%, depending on the bacterial isolate. Despite atrazine degradation in both soil fractions, a significant portion of atrazine residues persisted, depending on the bacterial degrader, initial cell concentration, and mineralisation and degradation rates. Overall, our approach can aid in quantifying atrazine persistence and degradation in soil, and in optimizing bioaugmentation strategies for remediating soils contaminated with persistent herbicides. © 2024 The Authors
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 29 条
  • [21] Plants affect the dissipation and leaching of anilide pesticides in soil mesocosms: Insights from compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA)
    Perez-Rodriguez, Paula
    Schmitt, Anne-Desiree
    Gangloff, Sophie
    Masbou, Jeremy
    Imfeld, Gwenael
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 308
  • [22] Insight of microbial degradation of n-hexadecane and n-heneicosane in soil during natural attenuation and bioaugmentation by Compound-specific Stable Isotope Analysis (CSIA)
    Guo, Yangnan
    Zhang, Man
    Wang, Ying
    Tian, Wenqing
    Liang, Jidong
    Tan, Houzhang
    Wang, Xuebin
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, 2023, 11 (03):
  • [23] Evaluating degradation of hexachlorcyclohexane (HCH) isomers within a contaminated aquifer using compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis (CSIA)
    Bashir, Safdar
    Hitzfeld, Kristina L.
    Gehre, Matthias
    Richnow, Hans H.
    Fischer, Anko
    WATER RESEARCH, 2015, 71 : 187 - 196
  • [24] First compound-specific chlorine-isotope analysis of environmentally-bioaccumulated organochlorines indicates a degradation-relatable kinetic isotope effect for DDT
    Holmstrand, Henry
    Mandalakis, Manolis
    Zencak, Zdenek
    Andersson, Per
    Gustafsson, Oerian
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2007, 69 (10) : 1533 - 1539
  • [25] 13C/12C and 15N/14N Isotope Analysis To Characterize Degradation of Atrazine: Evidence from Parent and Daughter Compound Values
    Meyer, Armin H.
    Elsner, Martin
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 47 (13) : 6884 - 6891
  • [26] Soil from a Hexachlorocyclohexane Contaminated Field Site Inoculates Wheat in a Pot Experiment to Facilitate the Microbial Transformation of β-Hexachlorocyclohexane Examined by Compound-Specific Isotope Analysis
    Liu, Xiao
    Li, Wang
    Kummel, Steffen
    Merbach, Ines
    Sood, Utkarsh
    Gupta, Vipin
    Lal, Rup
    Richnow, Hans H.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2021, 55 (20) : 13812 - 13821
  • [27] Anaerobic biodegradation of MTBE in a field site above the Israeli Coastal Aquifer: evidence from δ13C compound-specific isotope analysis
    Gafni, Almog
    Rosenzweig, Ravid
    Gelman, Faina
    Ronen, Zeev
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 91 (06) : 1638 - 1645
  • [28] Compound-Specific Carbon Isotope Analysis of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Water Using Solid-Phase Extraction Coupled with GC/C-IRMS
    Zhang, Lin
    Zhang, Yongtao
    Liu, Fuliang
    Liu, Jun
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2014, 26 (03) : 906 - 910
  • [29] Multi-element compound-specific stable isotope analysis (2H, 13C, 15N, 33/ 34S) to characterize the mechanism of sulfate and hydroxyl radical reaction and photolysis of benzothiazole
    Yu, Haiyan
    Ma, Limin
    Kuemmel, Steffen
    Liu, Xiao
    Schaefer, Thomas
    Herrmann, Hartmut
    Richnow, Hans-Hermann
    WATER RESEARCH, 2025, 279