Abstract
AbstractUptake of pesticides into barley leaves was measured under controlled conditions. Leaves detached from plants were submerged in aqueous solutions of 14C‐labelled (2,4‐dichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, triadimenol, bitertanol and pentachlorophenol. Uptake was biphasic. A short (30‐min) period with high rates of uptake was followed by uptake that proceeded more slowly and was steady over hours. Compartmentation of pesticides was studied by desorbing pentachlorophenol from leaves previously loaded with [14C]pentachlorophenol. From the uptake and desorption kinetics it was concluded that penetration of pesticides proceeds as follows: the compounds are first sorbed at the surface of epicuticular wax aggregates where they are in contact with the donor solutions. Solutes then diffuse through the surface wax aggregates into the cuticle. Equilibrium between donor solutions, surface wax and cuticle is established in about 30 min. After this time the amounts of solutes in these compartments no longer increase. Uptake after this time represents penetration into the leaf cells. This fraction of the pentachlorophenol is retained irreversibly, while that sorbed in wax and cutin can be desorbed again. All compounds were sorbed in cuticular waxes and partition coefficients wax/water were determined. On a mass basis only 5 to 10% of the amounts sorbed in cutin are sorbed in wax. This comparatively low solubility in wax contributes to the barrier properties of cuticular waxes. The other determinant of permeability is the very low mobility of solutes in cuticular waxes.
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