OCCURRENCE AND BEHAVIOR OF PESTICIDES IN RAINWATER, ROOF RUNOFF, AND ARTIFICIAL STORMWATER INFILTRATION

Citation
Td. Bucheli et al., OCCURRENCE AND BEHAVIOR OF PESTICIDES IN RAINWATER, ROOF RUNOFF, AND ARTIFICIAL STORMWATER INFILTRATION, Environmental science & technology, 32(22), 1998, pp. 3457-3464
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Engineering, Environmental
ISSN journal
0013936X
Volume
32
Issue
22
Year of publication
1998
Pages
3457 - 3464
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-936X(1998)32:22<3457:OABOPI>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
To prevent overloading of sewer systems and to ensure sufficient recha rging of the groundwater underneath sealed urban areas, collection and artificial infiltration of roof runoff water has become very popular in many countries including Switzerland. However, there is still a con siderable lack of knowledge concerning the quality of roof runoff, par ticularly with respect to the presence of pesticides. In this work, th e occurrence and the temporal variations in concentration in rainwater and in roof runoff from different types of roofs (i.e., clay tile roo fs, polyester roofs, flat gravel roofs) were determined for the most i mportant members of three widely used classes of pesticides (i.e., tri azines, acetamides, phenoxy acids). It is shown that in rain and roof runoff, maximum pesticide concentrations originating primarily from ag ricultural use occurred during and right after the application periods . Maximum average concentrations for single rain events and total load s per year were, for example, for atrazine, 903 ng/L and 13 900 ng/(m( 2) year); for alachlor, 191 ng/L and 5900 ng/(m(2) year); and for R-di chlorprop, 106 ng/L and 5100 ng/(m(2) year). Further, the study reveal s that a major portion of the compounds washed out from the atmosphere may actually reach the groundwater, particularly if the roof runoff i s infiltrated directly into highly permeable zones of the subsurface. Nevertheless, although in some cases European Union and Swiss drinking water standards (100 ng/L) were not always met in rain and roof runof f waters, for the three compound classes investigated, the groundwater contamination potential of the pesticides originating from the atmosp here can be considered of equal or even smaller importance as compared to their direct use in agriculture. The investigations also show that leaching of pesticides used as construction chemicals on roofs, that is, as roof protection agents in sealings used on Rat gravel roofs, ma y be a much more significant source of organic pollutants present in r oof runoff (see also our following paper in this issue).