4.7 Article

Wash off of imidacloprid and fipronil from turf and concrete surfaces using simulated rainfall

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 414, Issue -, Pages 515-524

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2011.10.051

Keywords

Insecticide; Formulation; Urban; Runoff; Byproduct; First flush

Funding

  1. California Department of Pesticide Regulation [06-0086C]
  2. United Graduate School of Agriculture Sciences, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan
  3. University of California, Davis, USA

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The surface runoff of imidacloprid granular product (GR) from turf surfaces, and imidacloprid emulsifiable concentrate (EC), fipronil suspension concentrate (SC) products and fipronil byproducts from concrete surfaces was investigated during 1 h rainfall simulations at 50 mm/h or 25 mm/h with product incubation times of 1.5 h, 1 d, 7 d, and 14 d. About 57.3% of the applied mass of imidacloprid, corresponding to an event mean concentration of 392.0 mu g/L, was washed off from the concrete surfaces after 1.5 h of incubation. After 1 d, 7 d. and 14 d of incubation on either turf or concrete surfaces, up to 5.9% of the applied mass of pesticide was removed in each of the run-off events. The maximum concentrations of pesticides were observed in the initial fraction of the runoff collected in the first rainfall event. They were 157.8, 3267.8 and 143.3 mu g/L for imidacloprid GR, imidacloprid EC and fipronil SC, respectively. Imidacloprid was not persistent on concrete surfaces, with run-off concentrations below detection limits in 7 d incubation experiments. The cumulative mass losses of imidacloprid from turf and fipronil from concrete had a linear relation with cumulative surface run-off depth, while cumulative mass losses of imidacloprid from concrete surfaces were better fit by a power function of the cumulative surface run-off depth. The concentrations of fipronil in the runoff from the third rainfall event at 14 d incubation time were still relatively high and ranged from 12.0 to 31.0 mu g/L. A toxicity unit approach was also employed to evaluate the potential acute toxicity of fipronil and its byproducts to aquatic organisms. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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