Fate of isoxaben in a containerized plant rhizosphere system.
Clyatt E Drakeford, N Dwight Camper, Melissa B Riley
Index: Chemosphere 50(9) , 1243-7, (2003)
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Abstract
Commercial production of ornamental plants is an important industry in the United States and involves a complex technology that includes the use of herbicides. Isoxaben[N-[3-(1-ethyl-1-methylpropyl)-5-isoxazolyl]-2,6-dimethoxybenzamide] is a pre-emergence herbicide used for controlling weeds in many areas including containerized ornamental plants. Degradation was studied in potting mix (80% bark, 20% sand) with three different regimes (sterile, bulk and rhizosphere). The rhizosphere regime contained Switch Grass (Panicum virgatum), and plants were allowed to grow for 14 days before adding isoxaben (10 microg/g potting mix). Isoxaben was degraded to 0.5 microg/g in 60 days giving a half-life of 7 days. Two degradation products were detected: 3-nitrophthalic acid in the rhizosphere and bulk regimes and 4-methoxyphenol in the sterile regime. Microbial population shifts were determined by fatty acid methyl ester profile analysis and were influenced by the introduction of a plant (rhizosphere regime) and by isoxaben addition.
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