Abstract
Different Saskatchewan soils were studied to determine their populations of 2,4-D [(2,4-dichlorophenoxy) acetic acid] degraders and gross aerobic bacteria. Soil from Indian Head field plots receiving relatively high field rates (1.12 or 1.68 kg/ha) of 2,4-D amine or ester applied annually over the previous 32 yr contained the highest population of degraders, ranging from 103 to 104 degraders/g soil. Control plots recorded lower populations of degraders (2.5 ± 0.5 × 103 degraders/g soil). Five soils from around the province were also studied, and a relationship was found between the rate of breakdown of 14C-2,4-D in the soil and the number of degraders. Another soil from a different site at Indian Head, but of a similar type to that in the field plots, displayed a much slower rate of 2,4-D degradation and also a much lower degrader population (7 ± 2 degraders/g soil) when compared to the other four soils (4 × 102 to 9 × 102 degraders/g soil). The ratio of degraders to the total bacterial flora varied in all studies between 1:6.5 × 102 and 1:3 × 105. When 1030 soil isolates were screened for their ability to degrade 2,4-D using an agar-block extraction technique, none possessed this feature. This would support the hypothesis that the ratio of 2,4-D degraders to the total microbial flora was indeed large (at least 1:103).