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Vegetated agricultural drainage ditches for the mitigation of pyrethroid‐associated runoff
Author(s) -
Bennett Erin R.,
Moore Matthew T.,
Cooper Charles M.,
Smith Sammie,
Shields F. Douglas,
Drouillard Ken G.,
Schulz Ralf
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 - 10.1897/04-357r.1
Subject(s) - ditch , environmental science , bifenthrin , surface runoff , drainage , hydrology (agriculture) , pyrethroid , cyhalothrin , sediment , pesticide , ecology , geology , biology , geotechnical engineering , paleontology
Abstract Drainage ditches are indispensable components of the agricultural production landscape. A benefit of these ditches is contaminant mitigation of agricultural storm runoff. This study determined bifenthrin and lambda‐cyhalothrin (two pyrethroid insecticides) partitioning and retention in ditch water, sediment, and plant material as well as estimated necessary ditch length required for effective mitigation. A controlled‐release runoff simulation was conducted on a 650‐m vegetated drainage ditch in the Mississippi Delta, USA. Bifenthrin and lambda‐cyhalothrin were released into the ditch in a water‐sediment slurry. Samples of water, sediment, and plants were collected and analyzed for pyrethroid concentrations. Three hours following runoff initiation, inlet bifenthrin and lambda‐cyhalothrin water concentrations ranged from 666 and 374 μg/L, respectively, to 7.24 and 5.23 μg/L at 200 m downstream. No chemical residues were detected at the 400‐m sampling site. A similar trend was observed throughout the first 7 d of the study where water concentrations were elevated at the front end of the ditch (0–25 m) and greatly reduced by the 400‐m sampling site. Regression formulas predicted that bifenthrin and lambda‐cyhalothrin concentrations in ditch water were reduced to 0.1% of the initial value within 280 m. Mass balance calculations determined that ditch plants were the major sink and/or sorption site responsible for the rapid aqueous pyrethroid dissipation. By incorporating vegetated drainage ditches into a watershed management program, agriculture can continue to decrease potential non‐point source threats to downstream aquatic receiving systems. Overall results of this study illustrate that aquatic macrophytes play an important role in the retention and distribution of pyrethroids in vegetated agricultural drainage ditches.

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