Difference between revisions of "Bentazon"
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Revision as of 10:53, 21 August 2009
Definition of bentazon:
Bentazon is an herbicide used in agriculture for selective postemergence control of many broadleaf weeds in soybeans, rice, corn, peanuts, mint, dry beans, dry peas, and succulent lima beans. [1]
This is the common definition for bentazon, other definitions can be discussed in the article
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Notes
Bentazon |
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Formula |
C9H12N203S |
Bentazon is expected to enter surface water by run of from application sites. It has a moderate water solubility of 500 mg/l and a low tendency to adsorb to soils and sediments. In water it can be rapidly broken down by sun light. It can take between 24 hours and 4 moths to half its concentration depending on the environmental conditions. It can also be biodegraded. [2] [3]
It has a very low a tendency to bioaccumulate.
Bentazon has a low toxicity to most aquatic animals. Concentrations above 100 mg/l are necessary to cause toxicity in fishes. Invertebrates are most vulnerable; mussels die at concentrations above 20 mg/l. Concentrations above 5 mg/l might affect phytoplankton. [4]
Environmental standards and legislation
Included in the water framework list of priority substances