The uptake and distribution characteristics of a novel fungicide, pyraoxystrobin, labeled with 14C on its pyrazol ring, were investigated in cucumber (Cucumis sativus) seedlings. Foliar applied pyraoxystrobin rapidly penetrated the… Click to show full abstract
The uptake and distribution characteristics of a novel fungicide, pyraoxystrobin, labeled with 14C on its pyrazol ring, were investigated in cucumber (Cucumis sativus) seedlings. Foliar applied pyraoxystrobin rapidly penetrated the treated leaf and reached a maximum uptake of 68% after 5 d. The translocation of absorbed 14C in cucumber seedlings was both acropetal and basipetal. However, over 74% of the absorbed 14C-pyraoxystrobin remained in the treated leaves. The order of its distribution in the plant was as follows: treated leaf > stalk above the treated leaf > leaves above the treated leaf > stalk below the treated leaf > leaves below the treated leaf > cotyledon > root. Seedlings grown in soils containing bound residues (BR) of pyraoxystrobin revealed that the BRs were not easily absorbed or translocated by the plant. Soil type had a large effect on root uptake, with the highest uptake among the three tested soils from red clay.
               
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