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Laboratory Measured Emission Losses of Methyl Isothiocyanate at Pacific Northwest Soil Surface Fumigation Temperatures

Authors :
Vincent R. Hebert
Glenn C. Miller
Zhou Lu
Source :
Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology. 98(2)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Temperature is a major environmental factor influencing land surface volatilization at the time of agricultural field fumigation. Cooler fumigation soil temperatures relevant to Pacific Northwest (PNW) application practices with metam sodium/potassium should result in appreciably reduced methyl isothiocyanate (MITC) emission rates, thus minimizing off target movement and bystander inhalation exposure. Herein, a series of laboratory controlled flow-through soil column assessments were performed evaluating MITC emissions over the range of cooler temperatures (2–13°C). Assessments were also conducted at the maximum allowed label application temperature of 32°C. All assessments were conducted at registration label-specified field moisture capacity, and no more than 50% cumulative MITC loss was observed over the 2-day post-fumigation timeframe. Three-fold reductions in MITC peak fluxes at cooler PNW application temperatures were observed compared to the label maximum temperature. This study supports current EPA metam sodium/potassium label language that indicates surface fumigations during warmer soil conditions should be discouraged.

Details

ISSN :
14320800
Volume :
98
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c09b9570cefbdba12baf18e1e6a274eb