Title of article :
Modelling of the long-term fate of pesticide residues in agricultural
soils and their surface exchange with the atmosphere: Part II.
Projected long-term fate of pesticide residues
Author/Authors :
M.T. Scholtz a، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , T.F. Bidleman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
In the first part of this paper, a simple coupled dynamic soil–atmosphere model for studying the gaseous exchange of pesticide soil
residues with the atmosphere is described and evaluated by comparing model results with published measurements of pesticide
concentrations in air and soil. In Part II, themodel is used to study the concentration profiles of pesticide residues in both undisturbed and
annually tilled agricultural soils. Future trends are estimated for the measured air and soil concentrations of lindane and six highly
persistent pesticides (toxaphene, p,p′-DDE, dieldrin, cis- and trans-chlordane and trans-nonachlor) over a twenty-year period due to
volatilization and leaching into the deeper soil. Wet deposition and particle associated pesticide deposition (that increase soil residue
concentrations) and soil erosion, degradation in the soil (other than for lindane) and run-off in precipitation are not considered in this
study. Estimates of the rain deposition fluxes are reported that show that, other than for lindane, net volatilization fluxes greatly exceed
rain deposition fluxes. The model shows that the persistent pesticides studied are highly immobile in soil and that loss of these highly
persistent residues from the soil is by volatilization rather than leaching into the deeper soil. The soil residue levels of these six pesticides
are currently sources of net volatilization to the atmosphere and will remain so for many years. The maximum rate of volatilization from
the soilwas simulated by setting the atmospheric background concentration to zero; these simulations showthat the rates of volatilization
will not be significantly increased since soil resistance rather than the atmospheric concentration controls the volatilization rates. Annual
tilling of the soils increases the volatilization loss to the atmosphere. Nonetheless, the model predicts that, if only air–soil exchange is
considered, more than 76% of current persistent pesticide residues will remain after 20 years in the top 7 cm of annually tilled soils. In
contrast, lindane is relatively mobile in soil due to weaker binding to soil carbon and leaching of lindane into soil is the main removal
route for current lindane residues near the soil surface. The model predicts that the soil is a sink for lindane in the atmosphere and that soil
residue levels of lindane in the surface soil are determined by a balance between dry gaseous deposition to the soil from the atmosphere
and leaching fromthe surface soil into the deeper soil where degradation is the dominant loss route. The model suggests that deposition of
lindane from the atmosphere will sustain residues in the soil and, in the absence of fresh applications of lindane to the soil, eliminating
lindane from the atmosphere would lead to a rapid decline of lindane residues in agricultural soils of the southern U.S.
Keywords :
Persistent pesticides , Long-term fate , Soil concentration profiles , Soil residues , Air–soil surface exchange model
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment