Title of article :
Pesticides in the atmosphere of the Mississippi River
Valley, part I } rain
Author/Authors :
Michael S. Majewskia، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده , , William T. Foremanb، نويسنده , , Donald A. Goolsbyc، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Weekly composite rainfall samples were collected in three paired urban and agricultural regions of the Midwestern
United States and along the Mississippi River during April]September 1995. The paired sampling sites were located
in Mississippi, Iowa, and Minnesota. A background site, removed from dense urban and agriculture areas, was
located near Lake Superior in Michigan. Herbicides were the predominant type of pesticide detected at every site.
Each sample was analyzed for 47 compounds and 23 of 26 herbicides, 13 of 18 insecticides, and three of three related
transformation products were detected in one or more sample from each paired site. The detection frequency of
herbicides and insecticides were nearly equivalent at the paired Iowa and Minnesota sites. In Mississippi, herbicides
were detected more frequently at the agricultural site and insecticides were detected more frequently at the urban
site. The highest total wet depositional amounts mg pesticiderm2 per season. occurred at the agricultural sites in
Mississippi 1980 mgrm2. and Iowa 490 mgrm2. and at the urban site in Iowa 696 mgrm2.. Herbicides accounted
for the majority of the wet depositional loading at the Iowa and Minnesota sites, but methyl parathion 1740 mgrm2.
was the dominant compound contributing to the total loading at the agricultural site in Mississippi. Atrazine, CIAT
a transformation product of atrazine and propazine. and dacthal were detected most frequently 76, 53, and 53%,
respectively. at the background site indicating their propensity for long-range atmospheric transport.
Keywords :
precipitation , atmospheric deposition , herbicides , Insecticides , long range transport
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment