4.5 Article

An assessment of potential pesticide transmission, considering the combined impact of soil texture and pesticide properties: A meta-analysis

Journal

SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 1162-1171

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/sum.12794

Keywords

adsorption; Freundlich; half-life; pesticides; soil texture

Categories

Funding

  1. Environmental Protection Agency [2019-HW-LS-3]
  2. Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA) [2019-HW-LS-3] Funding Source: Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA)

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This paper develops a risk ranking of pesticide transmission through soil to waterways, considering physico-chemical properties of the pesticides, soil permeability, and the relationship between pesticide adsorption and soil texture. The data generated can be used as a screening tool for land managers to assess the potential transmission risks associated with the use of specified pesticides across different soil textures.
Pesticides are widely employed as a cost-effective means of reducing the impacts of undesirable plants and animals. The aim of this paper is to develop a risk ranking of transmission of key pesticides through soil to waterways, taking into account physico-chemical properties of the pesticides (soil half-life and water solubility), soil permeability, and the relationship between adsorption of pesticides and soil texture. This may be used as a screening tool for land managers, as it allows assessment of the potential transmission risks associated with the use of specified pesticides across a spectrum of soil textures. The twenty-eight pesticides examined were differentiated into three groups: herbicides, fungicides and insecticides. The highest risk of pesticide transmission through soils to waterways is associated with soils containing 45% sand. In a small number of cases, the resulting transmission risk is not influenced by soil texture alone. For example, for Phenmedipham, the transmission risk is higher for clay soils than for silt loam. The data generated in this paper may also be used in the identification of critical area sources, which have a high likelihood of pesticide transmission to waterways. Furthermore, they have the potential to be applied to GIS mapping, where the potential transmission risk values of the pesticides can be layered directly onto various soil textures.

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