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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/7644
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Title: | Degradation of terbuthylazine, difenoconazole and pendimethalin pesticides by selected fungi cultures |
Authors: | Pinto, A.P. Serrano, C. Pires, T. Dias, L. Martins Teixeira, D. Caldeira., A. T. |
Editors: | Barceló Cullerés, D. |
Keywords: | Biodegradation Difenoconazole Fungi Pendimethalin Terbuthylazine |
Issue Date: | 2012 |
Publisher: | Elsevier |
Citation: | A.P. Pinto et al. / Science of the Total Environment 435-436 (2012) 402–410 |
Abstract: | Contamination of waters by xenobiotic compounds such as pesticides presents a serious environmental problem
with substantial levels of pesticides now contaminating European water resources. The aim of this work
was to evaluate the ability of the fungi Fusarium oxysporum, Aspergillus oryzae, Lentinula edodes, Penicillium
brevicompactum and Lecanicillium saksenae, for the biodegradation of the pesticides terbuthylazine,
difenoconazole and pendimethalin in batch liquid cultures. These pesticides are common soil and water contaminants
and terbuthylazine is considered the most persistent triazine herbicide in surface environments.
P. brevicompactum and L. saksenae were achieved by enrichment, isolation and screening of fungi capable to
metabolize the pesticides studied. The isolates were obtained from two pesticide-primed materials (soil and
biomixture).
Despite the relatively high persistence of terbuthylazine, the results obtained in this work showed that the
fungi species studied have a high capability of biotransformation of this xenobiotic, comparatively the results
obtained in other similar studies. The highest removal percentage of terbuthylazine from liquid medium was
achieved with A. oryzae (~80%), although the major biodegradation has been reached with P. brevicompactum.
The higher ability of P. brevicompactum to metabolize terbuthylazine was presumably acquired through chronic
exposure to contamination with the herbicide. L. saksenae could remove 99.5% of the available pendimethalin in
batch liquid cultures.
L. edodes proved to be a fungus with a high potential for biodegradation of pesticides, especially difenoconazole
and pendimethalin.
Furthermore, the metabolite desethyl-terbuthylazine was detected in L. edodes liquid culture medium, indicating
terbuthylazine biodegradation by this fungus.
The fungi strains investigated could prove to be valuable as active pesticide-degrading microorganisms, increasing
the efficiency of biopurification systems containing wastewaters contaminated with the xenobiotics
studied or compounds with similar intrinsic characteristics. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/7644 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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