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Accumulation and leaching of the fungicide fentin acetate and intermediates in sandy soils

✍ Scribed by J. P. G. Loch; P. A. Greve; S. Berg


Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
450 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
0049-6979

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✦ Synopsis


Accumulation in soil and leaching to groundwater of fentin acetate were studied in the laboratory using two types of Dutch sandy soil differing in organic matter content. Mobility, adsorption, transformation and formation of intermediates were determined in unsaturated soil columns, batch shaking systems and soil incubation systems. Samples were analyzed for monophenyltin, diphenyltin and triphenyltin compounds after methylation. Therefore the transformation products diphenyltin oxide and phenyltin acid were determined separately. Both were detected in soil and pore water. Adsorption indicated that these fungicides are immobile in both types of soil. Nevertheless a small fraction was found in the column leachate. After 1 yr of percolation 5.5 and 20.2% of the dose was recovered as total phenyltin residue in the soil of low and high organic matter content, respectively; all the residue was in the upper 10 cm. The half-life of fentin acetate in soil with 1% organic C varied between 47 and 70 days and between 115 and 140 days in soil with 2% organic C. If fentin acetate is applied annually, one can expect to find an ultimate accumulation level of organotin residues of up to 25% of the annual dose in the plough layer.


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