Herbicide monitoring in soil, runoff waters and sediments in an olive orchard

Occurrences of surface water contamination by herbicides in areas where olive orchards are established reveal a need to understand soil processes affecting herbicide fate at field scale for this popular Mediterranean crop. A monitoring study with two herbicides (terbuthylazine and oxyfluorfen) in th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2016-11, Vol.569-570, p.416-422
Hauptverfasser: Calderon, Maria Jesus, De Luna, Elena, Gomez, Jose Alfonso, Hermosin, M. Carmen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Occurrences of surface water contamination by herbicides in areas where olive orchards are established reveal a need to understand soil processes affecting herbicide fate at field scale for this popular Mediterranean crop. A monitoring study with two herbicides (terbuthylazine and oxyfluorfen) in the first 2cm of soil, runoff waters, and sediments, was carried out after under natural rainfall conditions following winter herbicide application. At the end of the 107day field experiment, no residues of the soil applied terbuthylazine were recovered, whereas 42% of the oxyfluorfen applied remained in the top soil. Very low levels of both herbicides were measured in runoff waters; however, concentrations were slightly higher for terbuthylazine (0.53% of applied) than for oxyfluorfen (0.03% of applied), relating to their respective water solubilities. Congruent with soil residue data, 38.15% of the applied oxyfluorfen was found in runoff-sediment, compared to only 0.46% for terbuthylazine. Accordingly, the herbicide soil distribution coefficients measured within runoff field tanks was much greater for oxyfluorfen (Kd=3098) than for terbuthylazine (Kd=1.57). The herbicide oxyfluorfen is co-transported with sediment in runoff, remaining trapped and/or adsorbed to soil particle aggregates, due in part to its low water solubility. In contrast, terbuthylazine soil dissipation may be associated more so with leaching processes, favored by its high water solubility, low sorption, and slow degradation. By comparing these two herbicides, our results reaffirm the importance of herbicide physico-chemical properties in dictating their behavior in soil and also suggest that herbicides with low solubility, as seen in the case oxyfluorfen, remain susceptible to offsite transport associated with sediments. [Display omitted] •We monitored two herbicides in olive orchard field under real rainfall conditions.•Terbuthylazine was less persistent in the first 2cm of soil compared to oxyfluorfen.•Terbuthylazine concentration in runoff was low.•Oxyfluorfen recovered from sediments was 37.69% higher than terbuthylazine.•Oxyfluorfen on sediments favour long term water contamination.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.06.126