4.8 Article

Quantifying MCPA load pathways at catchment scale using high temporal resolution data

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 220, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118654

Keywords

Pesticides; MCPA; Catchments; Pathways; Export loads

Funding

  1. European Union?s INTERREG VA Programme - Department for the Economy (Northern Ireland) through Ulster University [IVA5018]
  2. European Union
  3. Department for the Economy (Northern Ireland) through Ulster University

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This study investigates the hydrological pathway processes of the agricultural acid herbicide MCPA in drinking water source catchments. The findings suggest that MCPA is mainly lost through acute, storm-dependent processes during the spraying season, with a portion being transported via deep baseflows. Reducing usage and implementing surface pathway disconnection measures are effective mitigation options.
Detection of the agricultural acid herbicide MCPA (2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid) in drinking water source catchments is of growing concern, with economic and environmental implications for water utilities and wider ecosystem services. MCPA is poorly adsorbed to soil and highly mobile in water, but hydrological pathway processes are relatively unknown at the catchment scale and limited by coarse resolution data. This understanding is required to target mitigation measures and to provide a framework to monitor their effectiveness. To address this knowledge gap, this study reports findings from river discharge and synchronous MCPA concentration datasets (continuous 7 hour and with additional hourly sampling during storm events) collected over a 7 month herbicide spraying season. The study was undertaken in a surface (source) water catchment (384 km(2)-of which 154 km(2) is agricultural land use) in the cross-border area of Ireland. Combined into loads, and using two pathway separation techniques, the MCPA data were apportioned into event and baseload components and the former was further separated to quantify a quickflow (QF) and other event pathways. Based on the 7 hourly dataset, 85.2 kg (0.22 kg km(-2) by catchment area, or 0.55 kg km(-2) by agricultural area) of MCPA was exported from the catchment in 7 months. Of this load, 87.7 % was transported via event flow pathways with 72.0 % transported via surface dominated (QF) pathways. Approximately 12 % of the MCPA load was transported via deep baseflows, indicating a persistence in this delayed pathway, and this was the primary pathway condition monitored in a weekly regulatory sampling programme. However, overall, the data indicated a dominant acute, storm dependent process of incidental MCPA loss during the spraying season. Reducing use and/or implementing extensive surface pathway disconnection measures are the mitigation options with greatest potential, the success of which can only be assessed using high temporal resolution monitoring techniques.

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