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Pesticides in Nursery Runoff: Sources and Transport Processes. Jay Gan Dept. Environmental Sciences UC Riverside, CA 92521 jgan@mail.ucr.edu 909-787-2712. Outline. Nursery and pesticides Current issues How does it happen? Governing Processes. Nursery in CA (2001). Production sales:
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Pesticides in Nursery Runoff:Sources and Transport Processes Jay Gan Dept. Environmental Sciences UC Riverside, CA 92521 jgan@mail.ucr.edu 909-787-2712
Outline • Nursery and pesticides • Current issues • How does it happen? • Governing Processes
Nursery in CA(2001) • Production sales: • $3.17 billion • 10.6% of CA agricultural output • 2nd among all CA agricultural products • 21.3% of the U.S. nursery/floriculture total (11.9% for FL) • Retail sales • $10.1 billion • 1st in the U.S. • CA horticulture industry jobs • 81,011 jobs in production • 87,856 jobs in retailing
CA Nursery Industry Total CA Nursery/Floral Production: $3.2 billion (2001) Floral 12% Misc. 8% Woody, decidous Evergreen 26% Potted plants Flowering foliage 20% Bedding plants 15% Non- Ornamentals 19%
CA Nursery Industry Total CA Retail Sales: $10.1 billion (2001) Florists $988 mil Hardware Home centers $3,576 mil Chain stores Warehouses $2,757 mil Garden centers Farms Nurseries $2,859 mil
CA Nursery Industry Total Sales Composition (2001) Lawn furniture Accessories Tree trim 20.8% EquipmentTools 28.4% Chemicals Fertilizers 24.8% Green goods 26.0%
CA’s Top 10 Nursery, Flower and Foliage Producing Counties
Nurseries & Pesticides • Pesticide Uses • Agricultural crops • Home lawns/gardens • Structural/indoor pest control • Nurseries • Roadside • Parks
Pesticide Use in California by Sectors (million lbs)
Trend of Pesticide Use Total Active Ingredients (mil lbs)
Midge Chironomus Mayfly Procloeon Surface water-Risk Pesticides • Not human safety concern ! • Aquatic toxicity: • Organophosphate insecticides (e.g., Dusban, diazinon) • Carbamate insecticides (e.g., carbaryl) • Synthetic pyrethroids (e.g., cyfluthrin, permethrin, …)
Most Used Nursery Pesticides (San Diego County, 2002) Greenhouse Containers Source: CDPR
Most Used Nursery Pesticides (San Diego County, 2002) Outdoor Containers Source: CDPR
Aquatic Toxic Insecticides (San Diego County, 2002) Greenhouse Containers Source: CDPR
Aquatic Toxic Insecticides (San Diego County, 2002) Outdoor Containers Source: CDPR
Water Quality Issues • Ground water issues • Surface water issues • TMDLs • TMDL examples
Groundwater Issues • TheCA Picture (CDPR, CWRCB) • 324 of 3,165 wells in year 2000 • 84 verified detections • From previous use (fumigants) • DBCP, EDB, 1,2-D • From existing use (herbicides): • Simazine, ACET (from simazine or atrazine), DACT, norflurazon, bromacil, diuron, atrazine, deethyl atrazine
Surface Water Quality Issues • Urban surface water quality issues • Pesticide detections in most streams • 99% streams with 1 pesticide • 70% streams with 5 pesticides • Sustained insecticide levels • Harmful to aquatic organisms • Beneficial use • TMDLs for many streams • The new rule!
What is TMDL? • CWA 303(d) • States to make list of “impaired” waters • Develop TMDLs for the listed waters • TMDLs to account for all pollutants and all sources, • TMDL includes non-point sources, e.g., urban and agricultural runoffs • Develop implementation plans (Basin Plans or Water Quality Control Plans in CA)
California: • RWQCBs • 800 TMDLs in total • 120 TMDLs in progress • Amend the Basin Plan by incorporating TMDLs • TMDL Elements: • Problem statement • Numeric targets • Source analysis • Allocations • Implementation plan • Linkage analysis • Monitoring/Re-evaluation • Margin of safety
San Diego Creek Pesticide TMDLs • Diazinon: • 200-455 ppt 50 ppt • 300-900% reduction! • Chlorpyrifos: • 87-111 ppt 14 ppt • 600-800% reduction! • Legacy pesticides: • DDT, chlordane,… • Urban use is the No.1 source!
Table 1. Proposed Water-Quality Criteria for Diazinon and Chlorpyrifos
How Does It Happen? • Storm water runoff • Irrigation runoff • Leaching through containers? • Planting media spills? • Runoff + planting media = pesticide runoff?
Nursery Runoff Runoff!
Runoff Driven: Storm runoff Over-irrigation
Step 1: Scrap off surface soil Step 2: Estimate potting mix content Step 3: Analyze pesticides Step 4: Correlation
Governing Processes • Degradation • Chemical • Microbial • Adsorption • Leaching Potential • Runoff Potential
Degradation in Soil • What is “degradation”? • Structural changes caused by chemical and/or microbial reactions • Desirable environmentally • Pesticide-dependent • Vary in different soil types • Measured by persistence or “half-life” T1/2 • Long “half-life” = problems • T1/2 = leaching potential • T1/2 = runoff potential
What Causes Degradation? • Chemical reactions • Hydrolysis (OPs, carbamates, etc.) – pH sensitive • Photolysis – by UV, near the surface • Oxidation – reduction by soil chemical species • Nucleophilic attacks by soil nucleophiles • Pesticide dependent • Soil dependent