4.7 Article

Comparative study of organic contaminants in agricultural soils at the archipelagos of the Macaronesia

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 301, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.118979

Keywords

Environmental monitoring; Pesticides; Persistent organic pollutants (POPs); Compounds of emerging concern (CECs); Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs); Pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs)

Funding

  1. PERVEMAC II project [MAC/1.1A/049]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports [FPU16-01888]
  3. University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria [ULPGC-012-2016]

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The occurrence of organic pollutants in soil is a major environmental concern. This study analyzed the levels of various organic compounds in agricultural soils in the Macaronesia region and found that pesticides were the most frequently detected compounds. The Canary Islands had the highest number of residues, while Cape Verde had the least contaminated soils.
The occurrence of organic pollutants in soil is a major environmental concern. These compounds can reach the soil in different ways. Point sources, related to pesticides that are used intentionally, can be applied directly to the soil, or reach the soil indirectly due to application to the aerial parts of crops. On the other hand, non-point sources, which reach soils collaterally during irrigation and/or fertilization, or due to the proximity of plots to industrialized urban centers. Long-range transport of global organic pollutants must also be taken into account. In this study, 218 pesticides, 49 persistent organic pollutants, 37 pharmaceutical active compounds and 6 anticoagulant rodenticides were analyzed in 139 agricultural soil samples collected between 2018 and 2020 in the Macaronesia. This region comprised four inhabited archipelagos (Azores, Canary Islands, Cape Verde, and Madeira) for which agriculture is an important and traditional economic activity. To our knowledge, this is the first study on the levels of organic compound contamination of agricultural soils of the Macaronesia. As expected, the most frequently detected compounds were pesticides, mainly fungicides and insecticides. The Canary Islands presented the highest number of residues, with particularly high concentrations of DDT metabolites (p,p' DDE: 149.5 +/- 473.4 ng g(-1); p,p' DDD: 16.6 +/- 35.6 ng g(-1)) and of the recently used pesticide fenbutatin oxide (302.1 +/- 589.7 ng g(-1)). Cape Verde was the archipelago with the least contaminated soils. Very few pharmaceutical active compounds have been detected in all archipelagos (eprinomectin, fenbendazole, oxfendazole and sulfadiazine). These results highlight the need to promote soil monitoring programs and to establish maximum residue limits in soils, which currently do not exist at either continental or local level.

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