Quantification of soil microbial functional genes as potential new method in environmental risk assessment of pesticides

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Authors

STACHE Fabian DITTERICH Franziska HOCHMANOVÁ Zuzana HOFMAN Jakub POLL Christian KANDELER Ellen

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Ecotoxicology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10646-025-02920-w
Doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10646-025-02920-w
Keywords OECD 216; phoN; Boscalid; Non-target soil microorganisms; Pesticide risk assessment
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Description Pesticides can have adverse effects on soil microorganisms, but they are underrepresented in the currently required OECD 216 test for environmental risk assessment of plant protection products (PPP). The guideline monitors soil microbial nitrogen transformation over 28 days, potentially missing long-term effects of persistent pesticides. Additionally, nitrate alone may be not sensitive enough to detect disruptions in microbial functions. We investigated whether functional gene analysis could provide a more sensitive bioindicator of pesticide impact. To compare this method with the standard test, we conducted a microcosm experiment following the OECD 216 experimental setup. To capture long-term effects beyond the typical test period, we extended the incubation duration to 56 days. Four different concentrations of the persistent fungicide boscalid were added based on predicted environmental concentration. We also assessed microbial responses to fungicide exposure by measuring classical soil microbial parameters. According to the standard test, boscalid had no harmful long-term effects on soil microbiota. In contrast, our analysis of functional genes found an overall reduction in the acid phosphatase-encoding phoN gene abundance on Day 56, and correspondingly, in acid phosphatase activity in the highest fungicide treatment. Simultaneously, we observed a tendency towards lower fungal abundance based on measured copy numbers of an ITS region of nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and increased cumulative CO2 production. These results indicate a fungicide-related response of the microbial community and impaired microbial phosphorus cycling. Extending the experimental period to 56 days revealed long-term effects that would have otherwise been undetected under the typical 28-day test duration.
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