Title of article :
Mitigation strategies to reduce pesticide inputs into ground- and
surface water and their effectiveness; A review
Author/Authors :
Stefan Reichenberger ?، نويسنده , , Martin Bach Jensen، نويسنده , , Adrian Skitschak، نويسنده , , Hans-Georg Frede، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
In this paper, the current knowledge on mitigation strategies to reduce pesticide inputs into surface water and groundwater, and
their effectiveness when applied in practice is reviewed. Apart from their effectiveness in reducing pesticide inputs into groundand
surface water, the mitigation measures identified in the literature are evaluated with respect to their practicability. Those
measures considered both effective and feasible are recommended for implementing at the farm and catchment scale. Finally,
recommendations for modelling are provided using the identified reduction efficiencies.
Roughly 180 publications directly dealing with or being somehow related to mitigation of pesticide inputs into water bodies
were examined. The effectiveness of grassed buffer strips located at the lower edges of fields has been demonstrated. However, this
effectiveness is very variable, and the variability cannot be explained by strip width alone. Riparian buffer strips are most probably
much less effective than edge-of-field buffer strips in reducing pesticide runoff and erosion inputs into surface waters. Constructed
wetlands are promising tools for mitigating pesticide inputs via runoff/erosion and drift into surface waters, but their effectiveness
still has to be demonstrated for weakly and moderately sorbing compounds. Subsurface drains are an effective mitigation measure
for pesticide runoff losses from slowly permeable soils with frequent waterlogging. For the pathways drainage and leaching, the
only feasible mitigation measures are application rate reduction, product substitution and shift of the application date. There are
many possible effective measures of spray drift reduction. While sufficient knowledge exists for suggesting default values for the
efficiency of single drift mitigation measures, little information exists on the effect of the drift reduction efficiency of combinations
of measures. More research on possible interactions between different drift mitigation measures and the resulting overall drift
reduction efficiency is therefore indicated. Point-source inputs can be mitigated against by increasing awareness of the farmers with
regard to pesticide handling and application, and encouraging them to implement loss-reducing measures of “best management
practice”. In catchments dominated by diffuse inputs at least in some years, mitigation of point-source inputs alone may not be
sufficient to reduce pesticide loads/concentrations in water bodies to an acceptable level.
Keywords :
diffuse sources , effectiveness , Point sources , Practicability , mitigation measures , pesticides , risk
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment