Pesticides in the Environment: Impacts and Challenges in Agriculture

A special issue of Agriculture (ISSN 2077-0472). This special issue belongs to the section "Ecosystem, Environment and Climate Change in Agriculture".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 5 January 2025 | Viewed by 135

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Department of Biological Science, College of Science and Engineering, Sangji University, Wonju-si 26339, Republic of Korea
Interests: bioremediation; soil microorganism ecology; risk assessment of GMO; bacterial taxonomy

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Pesticides which enter the soil environment are subject to various degradative processes. The overall degradation of a pesticide from soil results from a combination of mechanisms, such as microbial degradation, chemical hydrolysis, photolysis, volatility, leaching, and surface runoff. The degree to which each mechanism will contribute to the overall degradation of the pesticide is in turn dependent on the physicochemical properties of the pesticide, the characteristics of the soil (pH, organic matter content, microbial biomass, and redox status), environmental conditions (temperature and moisture), and management practices (application rate and formulation type). There are complex interactions and interdependencies within each of these variables, which are difficult to quantify in situ.

Most pesticides cause adverse effects when reaching soil organisms. The intensity of the toxic effect varies with time, dose, organism characteristics, environmental presence, or pesticide characteristics. Their presence in environments determines the dose and time at which an organism is exposed, and could represent a hazard for worldwide life due to their mobility. Hence, the persistence in the environment leads to a risk for life; the more persistent a pesticide is, the worse its environmental impact.

In that sense, this Special Issue aims to understanding bioremediation as applied to a wider range of contaminated sites and chemicals.

Prof. Dr. Dong-Uk Kim
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • bioremediation
  • biodegradation
  • agriculture
  • pesticides

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Published Papers

This special issue is now open for submission.
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