Clear Search sequence regions


  • capsicum (1)
  • Dow (3)
  • factors (1)
  • humans (1)
  • plant roots (1)
  • rape (5)
  • roots (2)
  • soil (4)
  • soil pollutants (2)
  • vegetables (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Sulfonamides (SAs) in agricultural soils can be degraded in rhizosphere, but can also be taken up by vegetables, which thereby poses human health and ecological risks. A glasshouse experiment was conducted using multi-interlayer rhizoboxes to investigate the fate of three SAs in rape and hot pepper rhizosphere soil systems to examine the relationship between the accumulation and their physicochemical processes. SAs mainly entered pepper shoots in which the accumulation ranged from 0.40 to 30.64 mg kg-1, while SAs were found at high levels in rape roots ranged from 3.01 to 16.62 mg kg-1. The BCFpepper shoot exhibited a strong positive linear relationship with log Dow, while such relationship was not observed between other bioconcentration factors (BCFs) and log Dow. Other than lipophilicity, the dissociation of SAs may also influence the uptake and translocation process. Larger TF and positive correlation with log Dow indicate preferential translocation of pepper SAs. There was a significant (p < 0.05) dissipation gradient of SAs observed away from the vegetable roots. In addition, pepper could uptake more SAs under solo exposure, while rape accumulated more SAs under combined exposure. When SAs applied in mixture, competition between SAs might occur to influence the translocation and dissipation patterns of SAs.

    Citation

    Yaning Li, Xinlong An, Gang Liu, Guodong Li, Yanyan Yin. The fate of sulfonamides in microenvironments of rape and hot pepper rhizosphere soil system. International journal of phytoremediation. 2024;26(2):159-168

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37424147

    View Full Text