The Fate of Endosulfan in Water

@article{Shivaramaiah2005TheFO,
  title={The Fate of Endosulfan in Water},
  author={H. M. Shivaramaiah and Francisco Sánchez-Bayo and Jawad Al-Rifai and Ivan R. Kennedy},
  journal={Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B},
  year={2005},
  volume={40},
  pages={711 - 720}
}
Although the use of endosulfan to control cotton pests has declined, this insecticide still has widespread application in agriculture and can contaminate riverine systems as runoff from soil or by aerial deposition. The degradation of endosulfan in pure water at different pH values of 5, 7 and 9 and in river water from the Namoi and the Hawkesbury rivers of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, was studied in the laboratory. Endosulfan transformation into endosulfan sulfate in river water using… 
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TLDR
In this chapter, the basic characteristics of endosulfan, its usage, environmental issues and the bacterial induced degradation studies carried out in the past were discussed and the various degradation products, their pathways and bacterial toxicity were briefly covered.
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The results suggest that this mixed culture is worth investigating as a source of endosulfan-hydrolyzing enzymes for use in enzymatic bioremediation of endOSulfan residues.
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Using a cell-free preparation from Trichoderma harzianum, it is demonstrated that endosulfan metabolism in vitro was stimulated by exogenously added NADPH, and the evidence that the initial metabolic product of endOSulfan was endos sulfuran sulfate is concluded.
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The relatively rapid rate of degradation of beta‐endosulfan as compared to control, formation of endos sulfuran diol and absence of formation of the toxic metabolite endosulfAn sulfate suggest the possibility of developing a non‐chemical method for degrading endosolfan.
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