4.7 Article

Legacy and current-use pesticides in Western Canadian mountain air: Influence of pesticide sales, source proximity, and altitude

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.119882

Keywords

Passive air sampler (PAS); British Columbia; Pesticide usage; Mountain cold -trapping; Current -use pesticides (CUPs); Organochlorine pesticides (OCPs)

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Large amounts of pesticides are used in agriculture worldwide, and we have limited knowledge about their movement in the atmosphere. To investigate the distribution of pesticides and their relationship with environmental variables, we deployed air samplers in four mountains in Southern British Columbia. We found varying concentrations of pesticides in the air across the mountains, with proximity to sources and altitude playing important roles.
Large amounts of pesticides are applied in agriculture in Canada and around the world. A considerable fraction can be dispersed in the atmosphere and deposited in non-target ecosystems. Our knowledge of the factors controlling the movement of pesticides in the atmosphere is still limited. In order to investigate the atmospheric distribution of pesticides under the influence of diverse environmental variables, we deployed XAD-2 resin-based passive air samplers (PAS) at multiple elevations of four mountains across Southern British Columbia and derived annually averaged concentrations of twelve current-use pesticides (CUPs) and five legacy organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in air. The four mountains have similar altitude and latitude but vary in their proximity to source regions. Hexachlorobenzene, endosulfan I, and simazine were most abundant with median concentrations exceeding 50 pg/m3. While concentrations were generally lower than elsewhere in Canada, especially in agricultural regions, they varied greatly across the four mountains. Remote Mount Anderson had lower CUP levels than the other three mountains. CUP concentrations correlated well with regional pesticide sales, with two distinct spatial patterns becoming apparent. The OCP concentrations in the air of the four mountains were relatively uniform. CUP concentrations in air usually decreased with increasing altitude, when under the strong influence of ground-level sources. Source proximity and altitude appear to play a much more important role than precipitation and vegetation cover in the distribution of pesticides in the atmosphere. This study also highlights the value of a good registration system for pesticide sales for explaining environmental concentration variability.

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