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Mobilization of pesticides on an agricultural landscape flooded by a torrential storm
Author(s) -
Donald David B.,
Hunter Fraser G.,
Sverko Ed,
Hill Bernard D.,
Syrgiannis Jim
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
environmental toxicology and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1552-8618
pISSN - 0730-7268
DOI - 10.1897/03-668.1
Subject(s) - storm , environmental science , pesticide , surface runoff , hydrology (agriculture) , wetland , precipitation , winter storm , surface water , agronomy , ecology , oceanography , environmental engineering , geography , meteorology , geology , biology , geotechnical engineering
Mobilization of pesticides into surface waters of flooded agricultural landscapes following extreme precipitation events has not been previously investigated. After receiving 96 mm of rain in the previous 45 d, the Vanguard area of southeastern Saskatchewan, Canada, was subjected to a torrential storm on July 3, 2000, that produced as much as 375 mm of rain in 8 h. The majority of herbicides, but no insecticides, would have been applied to crops in the Vanguard area during the four weeks preceding the storm. After the storm, 19 herbicides and insecticides were detected in flooded wetlands, with 14 of them detected in 50% or more of wetlands. Average concentrations ranged from 0.43 ng/L (endosulfan) to 362 ng/L (2,4‐dichlorophenoxyacedic acid). The pesticides probably were from long‐range transport, followed by deposition in rain, and from herbicides applied to crops within the area subjected to the storm (1,700 km 2 ). In the following year, when only 62 mm of rain fell in the same 45 d, only five pesticides were detected in 50% or more of wetlands. We estimated that for the 1,700‐km 2 storm zone, 278 kg of herbicide were mobilized into rain and by runoff into surface waters, and 105 kg were removed from the Vanguard area by discharge into Notukeu Creek. Significant quantities of herbicides are mobilized to aquatic environments when prairie agricultural landscapes are subjected to torrential storms. In these circumstances, flooded wells and small municipal reservoirs used as sources of drinking water may be compromised by 10 or more pesticides, some at relatively high concentrations.