GPS News  
Pesticides Persist In Ground Water

The study revealed that the pesticides and degradation products detected most frequently in shallow ground-water samples.
by Staff Writers
Madison WI (SPX) Jul 10, 2008
Numerous studies over the past four decades have established that pesticides, which are typically applied at the land surface, can move downward through the unsaturated zone to reach the water table at detectable concentrations.

The downward movement of pesticide degradation products, formed in situ, can also contribute to the contamination of ground water. Once in ground water, pesticides and their degradation products can persist for years, depending upon the chemical structure of the compounds and the environmental conditions.

Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) investigated the occurrence of selected pesticides and their degradation products in ground water during a study funded by the USGS National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program.

Specifically, the authors examined several of the factors that can influence the likelihood with which pesticides and their degradation products are detected in shallow ground water-including oxidation-reduction (redox) conditions and ground-water residence times-at four study sites across the United States.

Results from the study were published in the May-June 2008 issue of the Journal of Environmental Quality.

The study revealed that the pesticides and degradation products detected most frequently in shallow ground-water samples from all four areas were predominantly from two classes of herbicides-triazines and chloroacetanilides.

None of the insecticides or fungicides examined were detected in ground-water samples. In most samples, the concentrations of the pesticide degradation products greatly exceeded those of their parent compounds.

Pesticides or their degradation products were detected most commonly in ground water that recharged between 1949 and 2004, and in monitoring wells spanning the full depth range (about 2 to 52 m) examined-from the shallowest to the deepest wells-in all four study areas.

Comparisons of pesticide concentrations with a variety of environmental variables indicated that redox conditions, ground-water residence times, and the concentrations of dissolved oxygen and excess nitrogen gas from denitrification (the breaking down of nitrogen compounds such as nitrate) were all important factors affecting the concentrations of pesticides and their degradation products in all four ground-water systems.

The four sites selected for this study were located in agricultural landscapes in Maryland, Nebraska, California, and Washington. They were also selected for variability in overall land use, crops grown, climate, agricultural practices, irrigation, geohydrologic settings, and redox conditions.

During the spring of 2004, water samples were collected from a network of 59 shallow single or clustered monitoring wells and analyzed for the occurrence of 45 pesticides and 40 pesticide degradation products, including herbicide, insecticides, and fungicides.

Greg Steele, senior author for this study, stated "Atrazine and its degradation product deethylatrazine both persisted in similar amounts at the Nebraska site, but in water samples from the other three study sites, there was little change with apparent age of water as the fraction as deethylatrazine generally exceeded 80% of the sum of atrazine and deethylatrazine.

"On the other hand, in three of the four areas studied (Washington excluded because it did not have any detections of metolachlor or its degradation products), the proportion of metolachlor in ground water was far less than that for its degradation products."

Related Links
American Society of Agronomy
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Only fraction of people recycle old mobile phones: study
Helsinki (AFP) July 8, 2008
Only three percent of mobile phone users recycle their old handsets and 74 percent have never even considered doing so, a study published Tuesday by the world's leading cell phone maker Nokia showed.







  • Boeing Projects Global Shift To New, More Efficient Airplanes
  • EU lawmakers force CO2 caps on airlines
  • EU airline pollution plan could spark trade wars: industry officials
  • China's new turboprop rolls off production line: official media

  • Renault cuts sales target, cites economic environment
  • China's auto sales growth slows on higher fuel costs: report
  • Protesters blast plans for Taiwan freeway
  • Ferrari to slash sports cars' carbon emissions: president

  • USAF E-8C Joint STARS Airframes Operationally Viable Through 2070
  • Lockheed Martin Wins US Defense Contract To Converge Distribution Information Systems
  • Crawford To Manage US Military Digital Video Imagery Distribution System
  • LockMart Begins Critical Test Phase For First Advanced EHF MilComms Satellite

  • Czech deputies may tie US radar vote to EU treaty: PM
  • Follow-up Czech-US anti-missile deal completed: minister
  • Russia warns US over missile defence
  • BMD Focus: Poles block base -- Part 1

  • Rich nations pledge action on food, oil, but deadlock on climate
  • Global Food Crisis As An Opportunity To End Hunger In Africa
  • Senate Resolution Shines Spotlight On The Importance Of Soils
  • How Small Can Crop Management Go

  • Exercise For Rapid Disaster Relief Using Space-Based Technologies
  • Disaster deaths worse so far in 2008 than tsunami year: Munich Re
  • Immune Buildings Designed To Combat Chemical Warfare And Diseases
  • Extended Cyclone Relief Efforts Aided From Space

  • Google lets people create custom virtual realms
  • Thales Alenia Space To Cooperate With IAI In The Amos-4 Satellite
  • Valley Forge Composite Delivers Specialized Space Components To NASA
  • Americom Government Services To Host US Air Force Payload

  • Eight Teams Taking Up ESA's Lunar Robotics Challenge
  • Three Engineers, Hundreds of Robots, One Warehouse
  • Tartalo The Robot Is Knocking On Your Door
  • Sega, Hasbro unveil new dancing robot

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement