Twenty-four steam-distilled samples of essential oils from inflorescences from Origanum vulgare
ssp. hirtum (Link) Ietswaart growing wild in Calabria, southern Italy, were analyzed by gas
chromatography and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. A total of 56 compounds were
identified. The main components of the essential oil were thymol and carvacrol, while their biogenetic
precursors, p-cymene and γ-terpinene, were the most aboundant monoterpenes. The relative
amounts of the two main constituents were comparable to the literature data on this species. Four
chemotypes were identified in Calabria on the basis of the phenolic content, i.e., thymol, carvacrol,
thymol/carvacrol, and carvacrol/thymol chemotypes. The first chemotype was the most frequent.
A significant variability of composition possibly correlated with the individual genotypes was
observed.
Keywords: Oregano; Origanum vulgare ssp. hirtum; essential oil composition; GC/MS
The disappearance of azoxystrobin, pyrimethanil, cyprodinil, and fludioxonil on tomatoes in greenhouse was studied. At the preharvest interval, except for cyprodinil, the pesticide residues were below the MRL fixed in Italy. The mechanism of disappearance studied with model systems shows that the decrease in residues was due to codistillation and photodegradation in pyrimethanil, to photodegradation in fludioxonil, and to evaporation and codistillation in cyprodinil. Azoxystrobin residues were stable during all experiments.
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