Effect of vermicomposting process on pesticide sorption capability by agro-industrial wastes Romero Taboada, Esperanza Salido, Amparo Cifuentes, Celia Fernández Bayo, Jesús Dionisio Nogales, Rogelio Adsorption Pesticides Vermicompost This study was financed by the ‘Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología’ (CICYT) through project REN2003-04693 and the ‘Consejería de Educación y Ciencia’ of Junta de Andalucia (project CAO01-007). E. Romero and J.D. Fernández thank the Science and Technology Ministry of Spain the ‘Ramón y Cajal’ research contract and the FPI doctoral grant, respectively. The aim of this work was to study the use of organic wastes from olive oil (alperujo), winery, and alcohol industries (vine shoots, spent grape marc, lees cake, and biosolids vinasse) as sorbents for pesticide control. The pesticide sorption capability of these organic wastes and the effect of vermicomposting process was also studied. The insecticide imidacloprid and different herbicides (diuron, metsulfuron-methyl, sulfuron-methyl, and flazasulfuron) were applied. The vermicomposting process was more effective for the agro-industrial wastes with a low lignin content. The sorption capacity of these wastes, natural or previously vermicomposted, was low for the anionic herbicides with respect to hydrophobic pesticides. Adsorption isotherms by the different wastes of confidor (imidacloprid 20% w/v) and diurokey (diuron 80% w/w) fit the Freundlich model (R 2 > 0.933). The larger K f values (231–138 µg1/n−1mL−1g−1) correspond to the spent grape marc, untreated or vermicomposted, due to the high lignin content of this waste. 2026-02-04T12:08:33Z 2026-02-04T12:08:33Z 2006-03-15 journal article Romero, E., Salido, A., Cifuentes, C., Fernández, J.D., Nogales, R. (2006) Effect of vermicomposting process on pesticide sorption capability by agro-industrial wastes. International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry 86, 289-297. https://doi.org/10.1080/03067310500249906 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/110657 10.1080/03067310500249906 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ embargoed access Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License Taylor & Francis