First account of spatio-temporal analysis, historical trends, source apportionment and ecological risk assessment of banned organochlorine pesticides along the Ganga River

We conducted the first comprehensive assessment of the presence, source, and ecotoxicological implication of 13 banned and restricted organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in the surface water along the Ganga River for two different seasons. Surface water samples were collected along the 2525 km stretch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2020-08, Vol.263, p.114229, Article 114229
Hauptverfasser: Sah, Ruchika, Baroth, Anju, Hussain, Syed Ainul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We conducted the first comprehensive assessment of the presence, source, and ecotoxicological implication of 13 banned and restricted organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in the surface water along the Ganga River for two different seasons. Surface water samples were collected along the 2525 km stretch of the Ganga through 43 sites representing five zones of diverse land-use pattern, pesticide consumption rate, and varied flow. The mean concentrations of ΣOCPs were significantly higher (∼2–5 times) in the post-monsoon or wet season [range: 0.126 to 10.402 μg/L (mean: 2.482 μg/L ± 3.589 and median: 1.433)] than in the post-winter or dry season [range: 0.053 to 3.010 μg/L (mean: 0.765 μg/L±1.033 and median: 0.399)]. Lindane (γ-HCH) was the dominant and most frequently detected pesticide at all the sites, indicating possible continued use of this banned pesticide in agricultural practices. The spatial distribution of OCPs revealed non-significant difference amongst different zones and indicate that point source pollution from the open drains along the Ganga could be responsible for observed trend. Ratio diagnostic analysis highlighted the fresh inputs and potential illegal use of lindane and chlordane at all the zones whereas, historical use of DDT was revealed at the majority of sites. Interestingly, fresh inputs of DDT were observed in the relatively pristine high altitude Upper zone (UZ) suggesting long-range atmospheric transfer and its continued use in the zone. Risk quotient (RQ) analysis revealed high ecotoxicological risks (>1), at all the studied sites for p, p’ DDE. The lower zone (LZ) emerged as a high ecological risk zone. The study highlights that though the OCPs analysed in this study are banned/restricted in India, still the implementation of the ban is poor and delayed and the country requires stricter adherence to its National Implementation Plan (NIP) on pesticides. [Display omitted] •Spatio-temporal distribution of 13 banned OCPs was conducted along the Ganga.•Concentration ranged from 0.126 to 10.402 μg/L in the post-monsoon and 0.053–3.010 μg/L in the post winter season.•γ-HCH (Lindane) was the most frequently detected compound in all zones, and fresh inputs of lindane and chlordane was noted.•Lower zone was the most contaminated and posed highest ecological risk.•Higher ecotoxicological risks (RQ > 1) was found to be associated with p,p'-DDE in both seasons and all zones. This is the first report on the presence, source and spatio-temporal o
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114229