Refine search
Results 1-2 of 2
Comparative environmental impacts of glyphosate and conventional herbicides when used with glyphosate-tolerant and non-tolerant crops.
2010
Mamy, Laure | Gabrielle, Benoit | Barriuso Benito, Enrique
The introduction of glyphosate-tolerant (GT) crops is expected to mitigate the environmental contamination by herbicides because glyphosate is less persistent and toxic than the herbicides used on non-GT crops. Here, we compared the environmental balances of herbicide applications for both crop types in three French field trials. The dynamic of herbicides and their metabolites in soil, groundwater and air was simulated with PRZM model and compared to field measurements. The associated impacts were aggregated with toxicity potentials calculated with the fate and exposure model USES for several environmental endpoints. The impacts of GT systems were lower than those of non-GT systems, but the accumulation in soils of one glyphosate metabolite (aminomethylphosphonic acid) questions the sustainability of GT systems. The magnitude of the impacts depends on the rates and frequency of glyphosate application being highest for GT maize monoculture and lowest for combination of GT oilseed rape and non-GT sugarbeet crops. The impacts of herbicide applications on glyphosate-tolerant crops could be higher than expected due to the accumulation of a metabolite of glyphosate in soils.
Show more [+] Less [-]Soil microbial ecology: ecosystemic functions and services
2010
Philippot, Laurent
Soil carries out functions that are crucial for theenvironment and life on earth and is therefore an essential non renewableresource for mankind. Recently, the European Soil Framework Directive proposalindicated that soil is under increasing environmental pressure mostly due tothe intensification of human activities, which are damaging the capacity ofsoil to continue to perform in full its broad variety of crucial functions.Most of these soil functions are depending on micro-organisms inhabiting the soil.The diversity of soil micro-organisms is the highest on earth with estimates ofseveral thousand to several million different genomes per gram of soil. Howeverfundamental knowledge of the diversity and ecology of microbial communitiescarrying out soil functions is still limited. Understanding the impact ofanthropogenic activities on microbial communities and how this relates to soilfunctioning is therefore a major challenge in soil microbiology. The revolutionin the techniques available to date offer exciting opportunities for a betterunderstanding of the relationships between microbial diversity and soilfunctions. This talk will focus on the novel insights into the impact of humanactivities on microbial communities and potential consequences for ecosystemprocesses.
Show more [+] Less [-]