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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/9338

Title: THATCH AND SOIL PESTICIDE DEGRADATION AND MICROBIAL ACTIVITY AS INFLUENCED BY TURF CULTIVATION PRACTICES
Authors: MU, YUSONG
Advisors: Carroll, Mark J
Department/Program: Natural Resource Sciences
Type: Thesis
Sponsors: Digital Repository at the University of Maryland
University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
Keywords: 0285 Agriculture, Agronomy
MICROBIAL ACTIVITY, PESTICIDE DEGRADATION, THATCH, TURF CULTIVATION
Issue Date: 2009
Abstract: Pesticide degradation in turf is complicated by presence of an organic matter enriched layer called thatch. It is not well understood how the extensive pesticide sorption capacity of thatch may affect the aerobic degradation of pesticides in thatch. Hollow tine cultivation and vertical mowing are two commonly used cultivation practices used to control thatch. Two studies were conducted to determine how these two cultural practices may affect microbial activity and pesticide degradation within thatch and soil. Hollow tine cultivation briefly enhanced microbial activity within thatch while vertical mowing had no consistent effect on thatch or soil microbial activity. Neither cultivation practice consistently altered the aerobic degradation of 2,4-D, flutolanil or chlorpyrifos. Thatch and soil aerobic degradation constants obtained for flutolanil and chlorpyrifos supported the hypothesis that strongly adsorbed pesticides are shielded from microbial populations that degrade pesticides within thatch.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/9338
Appears in Collections:UM Theses and Dissertations
Plant Science & Landscape Architecture Theses and Dissertations

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