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Research Product

Bourquin, A.W. 1977. Degradation of Malathion by Salt-Marsh Microorganisms. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 33(2):356-362. (ERL,GB 291).

Numerous bacteria from a salt-marsh environment are capable of degrading malathion, an organophosphate insecticide, when supplied with additional nutrients as energy and carbon sources. Seven isolates exhibited ability (48 to 90%) to degrade malathion as a sole carbon source. Gas and thin-layer chromatography and infrared spectroscopy confirmed malathion to be degraded via malathion-monocarboxylic acid to the dicarboxylic acid and then to various phosphothionates. These techniques also identified desmethyl-malathion, phosphorothionates, and four-carbon dicarboxylic acids as degradation products formed as a result of phosphatase activity.

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