“…The free forms of glyphosate and AMPA are thus easily dispersed, especially in wet soils due to preferential flow (Vereecken, 2005), and heavy rains shortly after glyphosate application increase the entry of glyphosate to surface water bodies through transport with runoff and suspended load (Botta et al, 2009;Candela et al, 2010;Gjettermann et al, 2009;Peruzzo et al, 2008;Stone and Wilson, 2006;Vereecken, 2005). Luijendijk et al (2003) reported that up to 24% of the glyphosate sprayed on hard surface soil was transported in runoff to surrounding fields, and Todorovic et al (2014) showed that approximately 47% of applied glyphosate was transported in the runoff associated with erosion and tillage managements (plough or not). The solubility of glyphosate contributes much to its contamination of surface water, but glyphosate and AMPA bound to particles suspended in water is another means of glyphosate and AMPA transport, known as particle-facilitated transport (Rügner et al, 2014;VandeVoort et al, 2013).…”