Research on phytotoxicity assessment and photosynthetic characteristics of nicosulfuron residues on Beta vulgaris L.

Autor: Zhao, Xiaoyu1 (AUTHOR), Xie, Qing1 (AUTHOR), Song, Baiquan1 (AUTHOR) 13212929229@163.com, Riaz, Muhammad2 (AUTHOR), Lal, Milan Kumar3 (AUTHOR), Wang, Longfeng1 (AUTHOR), Lin, Xiaochen1 (AUTHOR), Huo, Jialu1 (AUTHOR)
Zdroj: Journal of Environmental Management. Feb2024, Vol. 353, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Abstrakt: Nicosulfuron is a common herbicide used to control weeds in maize fields. In northeast China, sugar beet is often grown as a subsequent crop after maize, and its frequently suffers from soil nicosulfuron residue damage, but the related toxicity evaluation and photosynthetic physiological mechanisms are not clear. Therefore, we experimented to evaluate the impacts of nicosulfuron residues on beet growth, photochemical properties, and antioxidant defense system. The results showed that when the nicosulfuron residue content reached 0.3 μg kg−1, it inhibited the growth of sugar beet. When it reached 36 μg kg−1 (GR50), the growth stagnated. Compared to the control group, a nicosulfuron residue of 36 μg kg−1 significantly decreased beet plant height (70.93 %), leaf area (91.85 %), dry weights of shoot (70.34 %) and root (32.70 %). It also notably reduced the potential photochemical activity (Fv/Fo) by 12.41 %, the light energy absorption performance index (PIabs) by 46.09 %, and light energy absorption (ABS/CSm) by 6.56 %. It decreased the capture (TRo/CSm) by 9.30 % and transferred energy (ETo/CSm) by 16.13 % per unit leaf cross-section while increasing the energy flux of heat dissipation (DIo/CSm) by 22.85 %. This ultimately impaired the photochemical capabilities of PSI and PSII, leading to a reduction in photosynthetic performance. Furthermore, nicosulfuron increased malondialdehyde (MDA) content while decreasing superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activities. In conclusion, this research clarified the toxicity risk level, lethal dose, and harm mechanism of the herbicide nicosulfuron residue. It provides a theoretical foundation for the rational use of herbicides in agricultural production and sugar beet planting management. [Display omitted] • Nicosulfuron residue reduced the emergence rate of sugar beet. • Nicosulfuron residue considerably decreased the potential photochemical activity of sugar beet. • When the residual concentration of nicosulfuron reached 0.3 μg kg−1, the growth of sugar beet was significantly inhibited. • Nicosulfuron residue concentration of 36 μg kg−1 is the lethal dose in sugar beet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE