Title of article :
The significance of entry routes as point and non-point sources of pesticides in small streams
Author/Authors :
Michael Neumann، نويسنده , , Ralf Schulz، نويسنده , , Karin Sch?fer، نويسنده , , Wolfgang Müller، نويسنده , , Wilfried Mannheller، نويسنده , , Matthias Liess، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
8
From page :
835
To page :
842
Abstract :
In an agricultural catchment area in Germany we analyzed water samples from five entry routes for 2 insecticides, 5 fungicides and 13 herbicides. The sewage plant outlet and the emergency overflow of a sewage sewer contained only herbicides. In each farmyard runoff we found on average 24 g pesticides during application period, presumably caused by cleaning the spraying equipment. In comparison, the field runoff and the rainwater sewer contained less load, but also insecticides, fungicides and herbicides. The sewage plant caused 65.9% of the total herbicide load, the sewage sewer 19.8% and the farmyard runoff 12.8%. The farmyards also caused 83.7% of total insecticide and 83.8% of fungicide load. The total load of all entry routes is correlated with the amount of pesticides applied in the catchment area and the Ko/w value for each pesticide (mult. regress. r2: 0.82; p<0.0001; n=14). In stream A the sewage plant caused a slight but continuous contamination by herbicides with 82% of the total load found during low-water phases. In comparison, stream B had only farmyard runoff and non-point sources, which caused high peaks of herbicide and a contamination by insecticides. Consequently, high-water phases generated 70% of the total pesticide load.
Keywords :
Catchment , Farmyard seepage , sewage plant , pesticide , Headwater streams , Surface runoff
Journal title :
Water Research
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Water Research
Record number :
768326
Link To Document :
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