Publication Cover
Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B
Pesticides, Food Contaminants, and Agricultural Wastes
Volume 33, 1998 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

Microbial degradation of carbosulfan by carbosulfan ‐ and carbofuran ‐ retreated rice soil suspension

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Pages 369-379 | Received 15 Sep 1997, Published online: 21 Nov 2008
 

Abstract

The role of microorganisms in the degradation of carbosulfan (2,3‐dihydro‐2,2‐ dimethyl‐7‐ benzofuranyl‐ (di‐n‐butyl)‐ aminosulfenyl methylcarbamate), an analogue of carbofuran (2,3‐dihydro‐2,2‐dimethyl‐7‐benzofiiranyl‐N‐methyl carbamate) was studied by selective enrichment of microorganisms degrading either or both insecticides by repeated application of the insecticides, individually or in combination to flooded soil. Soil suspension from the pots treated with carbosulfan and carbofuran, individually or in combination collected after two applications, effected distinctly more rapid hydrolysis of carbosulfan than did the suspension from untreated pots or the uninoculated medium. The rate of hydrolysis was further accelerated by soil suspensions collected after six applications of the insecticides in the order carbosulfan treated > carbofuran treated > carbosulfan + carbofuran treated. The ability of treated and untreated suspension to degrade carbofuran was also studied. The rate of degradation of carbofuran by the suspension was in the order carbofuran retreated > carbosulfan + carbofuran retreated > carbosulfan retreated soil. Further involvement of microorganism in the rapid degradation of carbosulfan was confirmed by testing the degradation in sterilized and nonsterilized enrichment culture.

Notes

For correspondence

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