Leaching and degradation of 21 pesticides in a full-scale model biobed

被引:59
作者
Spliid, Niels Henrik [1 ]
Helweg, Arne [1 ]
Heinrichson, Kirsten [1 ]
机构
[1] Danish Inst Agr Sci, Dept Integrated Pest Management, Res Ctr Flakkebjerg, DK-4200 Slagelse, Denmark
关键词
biobed; bioavailability; degradation; leaching; pesticides; point sources; pollution; sprayer;
D O I
10.1016/j.chemosphere.2006.05.049
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Filling and cleaning of pesticide sprayers presents a potential risk of pollution of soil and water. Three different solutions for handling sprayers have been suggested: Filling and cleaning in the field, filling and cleaning on hard surfaces with collection of the waste water, and filling and cleaning on a biobed, which is an excavation lined with clay and filled with a mixture of chopped straw, sphagnum and soil with turf on top, and with increased sorption capacity and microbial activity for degradation of the pesticides. In the present study the degradation and leaching of 21 pesticides (5 g of each) was followed in an established full-scale model biobed. Percolate was collected and analysed for pesticide residues, and the biobed material was sampled at three different depths and analysed by liquid chromatography double mass spectrometry (LC-MSMS). During the total study period of 563 days, no traces of 10 out of 21 applied pesticides were detected in the percolate (detection limits between 0.02 and 0.9 mu g l(-1)) and three pesticides were only detected once and at concentrations below 2 mu g l(-1). During the first 198 days before second application, 14% of the applied herbicide bentazone was detected in the leachate with maximum and mean concentrations of 445 and 172 mu g l(-1), respectively. About 2% of the initial mecoprop and fluazifop dose was detected in the percolate, with mean concentrations of 23 mu g l(-1), while MCPA and dimethoate had mean concentrations of 3.5 and 4.7 mu g l(-1), respectively. Leachate concentrations for the remaining pesticides were generally below the detection limit (0.02-0.9 mu g l(-1), below 1% of applied). Sorption studies of five pesticides showed that compounds with a low K-d value appeared in the leachate. After 169 days, all pesticides in the biobed profile were degraded to a level below 50% of the calculated initial dose. Pesticides with K-d values above 100 were primarily found in the uppermost 10 cm and degraded slowest due to the low bioavailability. The 11 most degradable pesticides were all degraded such that less than 3% remained in the biobed after 169 days. Following second pesticide application of the biobed, leachate was sampled 215 and 365 days after the treatment. This showed the same pesticides to be leached out and at concentrations comparable to those of the first treatment. The same pesticides as after the first treatment were retained in the biobed. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2223 / 2232
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Assessing the removal of pharmaceuticals and personal care products in a full-scale activated sludge plant [J].
Salgado, R. ;
Marques, R. ;
Noronha, J. P. ;
Carvalho, G. ;
Oehmen, A. ;
Reis, M. A. M. .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2012, 19 (05) :1818-1827
[42]   Metagenomic characterization of biofilter microbial communities in a full-scale drinking water treatment plant [J].
Oh, Seungdae ;
Hammes, Frederik ;
Liu, Wen-Tso .
WATER RESEARCH, 2018, 128 :278-285
[43]   Molecular Insights into the Transformation of Dissolved Organic Matter in a Full-Scale Wastewater Treatment Plant [J].
Wen, Yuan ;
Dong, Lei ;
Xu, Jihong ;
Zhang, Xin ;
Lian, Lushi ;
Guan, Xiaohong .
ACS ES&T WATER, 2024, 4 (09) :4228-4238
[44]   Fate of mercury and methylmercury in full-scale sludge anaerobic digestion combined with thermal hydrolysis [J].
Liu, Jibao ;
He, Xianglin ;
Xu, Yufeng ;
Zuo, Zhuang ;
Lei, Pei ;
Zhang, Junya ;
Yin, Yongguang ;
Wei, Yuansong .
JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2021, 406
[45]   Modeling of micropollutant removal in full-scale membrane bioreactors: calibration and operations to limit the emissions [J].
Lejeune, Antoine ;
Choubert, Jean-Marc .
BIOPROCESS AND BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING, 2019, 42 (11) :1879-1892
[46]   Full-scale bioremediation and long-term monitoring of a phenolic wastewater disposal lake [J].
Stottmeister, Ulrich ;
Kuschk, Peter ;
Wiessner, Arndt .
PURE AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY, 2010, 82 (01) :161-173
[47]   Removal of ten pesticides from leaching water at pilot plant scale by photo-Fenton treatment [J].
Navarro, Simon ;
Fenoll, Jose ;
Vela, Nuria ;
Ruiz, Encarnacion ;
Navarro, Gines .
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL, 2011, 167 (01) :42-49
[48]   Impact of Resin and Fatty Acids on Full-Scale Anaerobic Treatment of Pulp and Paper Mill Effluents [J].
Meyer, Torsten ;
Yang, Minqing Ivy ;
Tran, Honghi N. ;
Allen, D. Grant ;
Edwards, Elizabeth A. .
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2016, 33 (06) :394-403
[49]   Organic micropollutant removal in a full-scale surface flow constructed wetland fed with secondary effluent [J].
Matamoros, Victor ;
Garcia, Joan ;
Bayona, Josep M. .
WATER RESEARCH, 2008, 42 (03) :653-660
[50]   Full-Scale Remediation of a Jet Fuel-Contaminated Soil: Assessment of Biodegradation, Volatilization, and Bioavailability [J].
José Luis R. Gallego ;
Carlos Sierra ;
Albert Permanyer ;
Ana I. Peláez ;
Demelza Menéndez-Vega ;
Jesús Sánchez .
Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, 2011, 217 :197-211