Publication | Closed Access
Sorption and Mobility of Chlorimuron in Alabama Soils
50
Citations
21
References
1989
Year
BiogeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryEngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringSoil PollutionSoil ChemistrySoil ContaminationEcotoxicologyEnvironmental ToxicologyAlabama SoilsChlorimuron AdsorptionSoil Thin-layer Chromatography
Soil thin-layer chromatography and a soil solution technique were used to evaluate chlorimuron adsorption and mobility in five Alabama soils. The order of adsorption was atrazine > metribuzin > chlorimuron; mobility was chlorimuron > metribuzin > atrazine. The order of adsorption of chlorimuron in the five soils was Sumter clay > Eutaw clay > Lucedale fine sandy loam > Decatur silt loam > Dothan sandy loam, and R f values were 0.63, 0.73, 0.69, 0.76, and 0.80, respectively. Chlorimuron mobility and adsorption were not highly correlated to any one soil type. Adsorption of all herbicides was inversely related to soil pH. Maximum chlorimuron adsorption in the Hiwassee loam was attributed to the high hematite and gibbsite content of the soil.
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