Title of article
Temporal variability in particle-associated pesticide exposure in a temporarily open estuary, Western Cape, South Africa Original Research Article
Author/Authors
S. Bollmohr، نويسنده , , J.A. Day، نويسنده , , R. Schulz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
479
To page
488
Abstract
This study assesses the risk of current-use pesticides in a temporarily open estuary in South Africa by developing probabilistic risk estimates. Particle-associated pesticides (chlorpyrifos, prothiofos, cypermethrin, fenvalerate, endosulfan and p,p-DDE) and physicochemical parameters (salinity, temperature, flow, and total organic content (TOC)) were measured in the Lourens River estuary (Western Cape) twice a month over a period of two years and equilibrium partitioning theory was applied to calculate concentrations of pesticides in the water. The 90th percentile concentrations of pesticides associated to suspended particles and the calculated concentrations in water were 34.0 μg kg−1 and 0.15 μg l−1 for prothiofos, 19.6 μg kg−1 and 0.45 μg l−1 for chlorpyrifos and 18.6 μg kg−1 and 0.16 μg l−1 for endosulfan. Highest average concentrations were found around the summer season due to higher application rates and as a result of the low flow during this season.
Species sensitivity distribution indicated a 1.5–2.8 times higher toxicity (hazardous concentration HC5) for marine organisms compared to freshwater organisms. The calculated concentrations in the water exceeded all threshold values suggested by international water guidelines. Chlorpyrifos and endosulfan posed the highest acute risk to the Lourens River estuary. No sufficient toxicity data and threshold values were found for prothiofos.
Keywords
risk assessment , salinity , sediment toxicity , Equilibrium partitioning , Species sensitivity
Journal title
Chemosphere
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Chemosphere
Record number
725148
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