Title of article :
Agricultural pesticides threaten the ecological integrity
of northern prairie wetlands
Author/Authors :
David B. DonaldU، نويسنده , , Jim Syrgiannis، نويسنده , , Fraser Hunter، نويسنده , , Gary Weiss ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
The northern Great Plains of North America has millions of small wetlands, and these are often dispersed through
cultivated fields. We investigated relationship between pesticide occurrence and precipitation in selected wetlands in
a 30.4=104 km2 area of the Great Plains with relatively uniform farming practices and 1 777 600 wetlands southern
Saskatchewan, Canada.. By early July after pesticides have been applied to crops, the mean number of pesticides
detected in wetlands ranged from 1.8 in regions with little precipitation -21 mm rain during the previous 15 days.
to 3.2 in regions under higher rainfall )90 mm.. The proportion of wetlands in which at least one pesticide
exceeded Canadian guidelines for the protection of aquatic life increased from 0% to 60% over this same
precipitation range. The maximum number of pesticides detected in a single wetland was six. Concentration of
lindane in wetlands increased with increasing precipitation. Using geographic information on rainfall, wetland
densities, area seeded to crops, and region specific relationships between pesticides and precipitation, we estimated
the number of wetlands in Saskatchewan with elevated levels of pesticides. In early July, during 3 of the 6 years, the
number of wetlands subjected to pesticide levels that exceeded guidelines for the protection of aquatic life was
significant, ranging from 152 000 to 424 000 wetlands or 9]24%, respectively, of the total. Lindane and triallate
exceeded the guidelines most frequently.
Keywords :
precipitation , pesticides , triallate , 2 , lindane , wetlands , 4-D
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment