Fate of chloroalkylene-9-14C in carrots, sugar beets, and soil under outdoor conditions. 1979

P N Moza, and I Scheunert, and F Korte

Immediately after application of chloroalkylene-9-14C to soil (1.32 ppm, based on dry weight of soil in the upper layer of 0 to 10 cm) under outdoor conditions, carrots were sown; in the following year, sugar beets were grown. About 80% of the radioactivity applied volatilized within one vegetation period. Most of the remaining radioactivity was still in the upper soil layer; 0.8% had dispersed to a depth of 40 cm, and 3.3% was taken up by the carrot plants. In the second year, no more decreases of soil residues was observed; uptake by sugar beets was 0.1% of the applied radioactivity. In the first year, the residues in the upper soil layer consisted of 41% unchanged chloroalkylene-9, 19% soluble metabolites, and 40% unextractable residues; the amount of unextractable residues rose to 68% in the second year. The following conversion products were characterized in the soil extracts: a monohydroxylated dichlorobiphenyl, a monomethoxylated dichlorobiphenyl, and two isomeric monohydroxylated, monoisopropylated dichlorobiphenyls; in carrot roots, a monomethoxylated dichlorobiphenyl was detected. Conjugates occurring in the soil yielded, after acid hydrolysis, a monohydroxylated dichlorobiphenyl among other compounds.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007306 Insecticides Pesticides designed to control insects that are harmful to man. The insects may be directly harmful, as those acting as disease vectors, or indirectly harmful, as destroyers of crops, food products, or textile fabrics. Insecticide
D010573 Pesticide Residues Pesticides or their breakdown products remaining in the environment following their normal use or accidental contamination. Pesticide Residue,Residue, Pesticide,Residues, Pesticide
D011078 Polychlorinated Biphenyls Industrial products consisting of a mixture of chlorinated biphenyl congeners and isomers. These compounds are highly lipophilic and tend to accumulate in fat stores of animals. Many of these compounds are considered toxic and potential environmental pollutants. PCBs,Polychlorinated Biphenyl,Polychlorobiphenyl Compounds,Biphenyl, Polychlorinated,Biphenyls, Polychlorinated,Compounds, Polychlorobiphenyl
D006868 Hydrolysis The process of cleaving a chemical compound by the addition of a molecule of water.
D012987 Soil The unconsolidated mineral or organic matter on the surface of the earth that serves as a natural medium for the growth of land plants. Peat,Humus,Soils
D014675 Vegetables A food group comprised of EDIBLE PLANTS or their parts. Vegetable

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