Medo, Juraj published the artcileChanges in soil microbial community and activity caused by application of dimethachlor and linuron, COA of Formula: C2H4ClNO, the publication is Scientific Reports (2021), 11(1), 12786, database is CAplus and MEDLINE.
Soil microorganisms and their activities are essential for maintaining soil health and fertility. Microorganisms can be neg. affected by application of herbicides. Although effects of herbicides on microorganisms are widely studied, there is a lack of information for chloroacetamide herbicide dimethachlor. Thus, dimethachlor and well known linuron were applied to silty-loam luvisol and their effects on microorganisms were evaluated during112 days long laboratory assay. Dimethachlor and linuron were applied in doses 1.0 kg ha-1 and 0.8 kg ha-1 corresponding to 3.33 mg kg-1 and 2.66 mg kg-1 resp. Also 100-fold doses were used for magnification of impacts. Linuron in 100-fold dose caused minor increase of respiration, temporal increase of soil microbial biomass, decrease of soil dehydrogenase activity, and altered microbial community. Dimethachlor in 100-fold dose significantly increased respiration; microbial biomass and decreased soil enzymic activities. Microbial composition changed significantly, Proteobacteria abundance, particularly Pseudomonas and Achromobacter genera increased from 7 to 28th day. In-silico prediction of microbial gene expression by PICRUSt2 software revealed increased expression of genes related to xenobiotic degradation pathways. Evaluated characteristics of microbial community and activity were not affected by herbicides in recommended doses and the responsible use of both herbicides will not harm soil microbial community.
Scientific Reports published new progress about 79-07-2. 79-07-2 belongs to amides-buliding-blocks, auxiliary class Chloride,Amine,Aliphatic hydrocarbon chain,Amide,Inhibitor, name is 2-Chloroacetamide, and the molecular formula is C2H4ClNO, COA of Formula: C2H4ClNO.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amide,
Amide – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics