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Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies.

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Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies. / Kurt-Karakus, Perihan Binnur; Stroud, Jacqueline L.; Bidleman, Terry et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 41, No. 14, 07.2007, p. 4965-4971.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kurt-Karakus, PB, Stroud, JL, Bidleman, T, Semple, KT, Jantunen, L & Jones, KC 2007, 'Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies.', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 41, no. 14, pp. 4965-4971. https://doi.org/10.1021/es0620787

APA

Kurt-Karakus, P. B., Stroud, J. L., Bidleman, T., Semple, K. T., Jantunen, L., & Jones, K. C. (2007). Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies. Environmental Science and Technology, 41(14), 4965-4971. https://doi.org/10.1021/es0620787

Vancouver

Kurt-Karakus PB, Stroud JL, Bidleman T, Semple KT, Jantunen L, Jones KC. Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies. Environmental Science and Technology. 2007 Jul;41(14):4965-4971. doi: 10.1021/es0620787

Author

Kurt-Karakus, Perihan Binnur ; Stroud, Jacqueline L. ; Bidleman, Terry et al. / Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 2007 ; Vol. 41, No. 14. pp. 4965-4971.

Bibtex

@article{a8bf595516a84046855a794214e476fd,
title = "Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies.",
abstract = "Variability in the enantioselective degradation of chiral organochlorine pesticides (alpha-HCH, cis- and trans-chlordane (CC and TC), and o,p'-DDT)in the field and laboratory was investigated. Background soils presumably receive the same EF signature of a compound via atmospheric deposition and then degrade that compound in a way that can vary over small spatial areas, Background soils from woodland and grassland areas were sampled to compare chiral signatures and determine the spatial variability within a few square meters. The enantiomer fractions, EF = areas of the (+)/[(+)+(-)]-enantiomers, showed variability between and within ecosystems. For example, the EF of CC varied between 0.272 -and 0.558 in nine samples taken over a few square meters, and a range of 0.431-0.506 was found within depths of a few centimeters. Woodland and grassland soils were spiked with alpha-HCH, TC, CC, and o,p'-DDT, and one portion was placed in the field to monitor changes in EF under in situ conditions and the other taken to the laboratory. In general, the enantiomer degradation preferences in the laboratory paralleled those in the field, with some differences. Soil organic matter content and pH exerted a minor influence on this variability. The results of this study have implications for the use of chiral compounds to make inferences about air-soil exchange and for the mechanisms of biodegradation/biotransformation of anthropogenic compounds in soils.}",
author = "Kurt-Karakus, {Perihan Binnur} and Stroud, {Jacqueline L.} and Terry Bidleman and Semple, {Kirk T.} and Liisa Jantunen and Jones, {Kevin C.}",
year = "2007",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1021/es0620787",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "4965--4971",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enantioselective degradation of organochlorine pesticides in background soils: Variability in field and laboratory studies.

AU - Kurt-Karakus, Perihan Binnur

AU - Stroud, Jacqueline L.

AU - Bidleman, Terry

AU - Semple, Kirk T.

AU - Jantunen, Liisa

AU - Jones, Kevin C.

PY - 2007/7

Y1 - 2007/7

N2 - Variability in the enantioselective degradation of chiral organochlorine pesticides (alpha-HCH, cis- and trans-chlordane (CC and TC), and o,p'-DDT)in the field and laboratory was investigated. Background soils presumably receive the same EF signature of a compound via atmospheric deposition and then degrade that compound in a way that can vary over small spatial areas, Background soils from woodland and grassland areas were sampled to compare chiral signatures and determine the spatial variability within a few square meters. The enantiomer fractions, EF = areas of the (+)/[(+)+(-)]-enantiomers, showed variability between and within ecosystems. For example, the EF of CC varied between 0.272 -and 0.558 in nine samples taken over a few square meters, and a range of 0.431-0.506 was found within depths of a few centimeters. Woodland and grassland soils were spiked with alpha-HCH, TC, CC, and o,p'-DDT, and one portion was placed in the field to monitor changes in EF under in situ conditions and the other taken to the laboratory. In general, the enantiomer degradation preferences in the laboratory paralleled those in the field, with some differences. Soil organic matter content and pH exerted a minor influence on this variability. The results of this study have implications for the use of chiral compounds to make inferences about air-soil exchange and for the mechanisms of biodegradation/biotransformation of anthropogenic compounds in soils.}

AB - Variability in the enantioselective degradation of chiral organochlorine pesticides (alpha-HCH, cis- and trans-chlordane (CC and TC), and o,p'-DDT)in the field and laboratory was investigated. Background soils presumably receive the same EF signature of a compound via atmospheric deposition and then degrade that compound in a way that can vary over small spatial areas, Background soils from woodland and grassland areas were sampled to compare chiral signatures and determine the spatial variability within a few square meters. The enantiomer fractions, EF = areas of the (+)/[(+)+(-)]-enantiomers, showed variability between and within ecosystems. For example, the EF of CC varied between 0.272 -and 0.558 in nine samples taken over a few square meters, and a range of 0.431-0.506 was found within depths of a few centimeters. Woodland and grassland soils were spiked with alpha-HCH, TC, CC, and o,p'-DDT, and one portion was placed in the field to monitor changes in EF under in situ conditions and the other taken to the laboratory. In general, the enantiomer degradation preferences in the laboratory paralleled those in the field, with some differences. Soil organic matter content and pH exerted a minor influence on this variability. The results of this study have implications for the use of chiral compounds to make inferences about air-soil exchange and for the mechanisms of biodegradation/biotransformation of anthropogenic compounds in soils.}

U2 - 10.1021/es0620787

DO - 10.1021/es0620787

M3 - Journal article

VL - 41

SP - 4965

EP - 4971

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 14

ER -