Abstract

Monosodium methanearsonate (MSMA), a selective contact herbicide, is a sodium salt of monomethyl arsenic acid (MMA or MAA). This paper focuses on the environmental fate of MMA. Decades of research have shown that a significant portion of applied MSMA drips to soil and is sorbed quickly. The fraction available for leaching or biological uptake decreases at a biphasic rate, first rapidly and then at a slower rate. A soil column study was designed to obtain quantitative information about MMA sorption and transformation and the effects of different environmental variables on these processes, in conditions simulating the environment of MSMA use on cotton and turf. Using 14 C-MSMA, this study quantified MSMA-derived arsenic species and differentiated between added arsenic and soil background levels. Similar behavior of MSMA was observed across all test systems with respect to sorption, transformation, and mobility, despite differences in soil type and rainfall treatment. All soil columns exhibited a rapid sorption of added MMA followed by continual sorption of residues into the soil matrix. Within the first 2 days, only 20%-25% of radioactivity was extracted by water. On day 90, less than 3.1% of added MMA was in a water extractable phase. MMA sorption was most rapid in the soil with the higher clay content. Dominant extractable arsenic species were MMA, dimethylarsinic acid, and arsenate, indicating that methylation and demethylation occurred. In all MSMA-treated columns, arsenite concentrations were negligible and indiscernible from those in untreated columns.

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