4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Lab-scale investigation of the ability of Polar Organic Chemical Integrative Sampler to catch short pesticide contamination peaks

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 40-50

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-018-3391-2

Keywords

POCIS; Pesticides; Fleeting events; Model selection; Laboratory-controlled conditions

Funding

  1. PoToMAC (Potential Toxicity of pesticides in Continental Aquatic Environments: passive sampling and exposure/impact on biofilms) program [ANR-11-CESA-022]

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This lab-scale study evaluates the ability of POCIS to integrate short contamination peaks of variable intensity and duration. It demonstrates that POCIS can capture very short pollution events and provide acceptable time-weighted average concentration estimates under laboratory-controlled conditions.
In this lab-scale study, the POCIS capacity to integrate short contamination peaks of variable intensity and duration was evaluated. POCIS were immersed for 14 days in tanks filled with tap water and spiked at different concentrations with 12 pesticides of various polarities (log K (ow) = 1.1-4.7) and classes (herbicides, fungicides, and insecticides). Concentrations were kept relatively constant at 1 mu g L (-1) and 5 mu g L (-1) , respectively, in two background exposure tanks. Three contamination peaks of increasing intensity and decreasing duration were simulated (10 mu g L (-1) for 24 h, 40 mu g L (-1) for 6 h, and 60 mu g L (-1) for 1 h). This lab-scale study demonstrated that ten moderately polar compounds (2 < log K (ow) < 4) showed a linear uptake, as observed in previous studies, while a non-linear model fits the data of the two most polar pesticides (log K (ow) < 2). Depending on chemical polarity, some compounds exhibited a burst effect or lag effect during the first 3 days of exposure. After 14 days of exposure, contamination peaks appeared integrated for seven compounds, showing the ability of POCIS to catch very short pollution events and to provide acceptable time-weighted average concentration estimates under laboratory-controlled conditions.

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