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Outline. Nursery and pesticidesCurrent issuesHow does it happen?Governing Processes. Nursery in CA (2001). Production sales: $3.17 billion10.6% of CA agricultural output2nd among all CA agricultural products21.3% of the U.S. nursery/floriculture total (11.9% for FL)Retail sales$10.1 billi
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1. Pesticides in Nursery Runoff: Sources and Transport Processes Jay Gan
Dept. Environmental Sciences
UC Riverside, CA 92521
jgan@mail.ucr.edu
909-787-2712
2. Outline Nursery and pesticides
Current issues
How does it happen?
Governing Processes
3. 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
4. CA Nursery Industry
5. CA Nursery Industry
6. CA Nursery Industry
8. Nurseries & Pesticides Pesticide Uses
Agricultural crops
Home lawns/gardens
Structural/indoor pest control
Nurseries
Roadside
Parks
10. Trend of Pesticide Use Total
11. Top Ten in California
12. Use Trend of “Reproductive Toxic” Pesticides in CA
13. Reproductive Toxic Products
14. Use Trend of Carcinogenic Pesticides in CA
15. Carcinogenic Pesticides
16. Use Trend of Cholinesterase Inhibiting Pesticides in CA
17. Cholinesterase-Inhibiting Pesticides
18. Use Trend of Groundwater-Risk Pesticides in CA
19. Groundwater-risk Pesticides
20. 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, …)
25. Water Quality Issues Ground water issues
Surface water issues
TMDLs
TMDL examples
26. Groundwater Issues The CA 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
28. 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!
29. 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)
30. 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
33. San Diego Creek Pesticide TMDLs
34. 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! San Diego Creek Pesticide TMDLs
37. How Does It Happen? Storm water runoff
Irrigation runoff
Leaching through containers?
Planting media spills?
Runoff + planting media
= pesticide runoff?
38. Irrigation
39. Nursery Runoff
41. Planting Media
44. Pesticides in Spilled Potting Mix
45. Loose Potting Mix
46. Governing Processes Degradation
Chemical
Microbial
Adsorption
Leaching Potential
Runoff Potential
47. Transport after application
48. 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 ?
49. Pesticide degradation in soil
50. 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
51. What Causes Degradation? Microbial transformations
Biodegradation – bacteria use pesticides as “food”
Cometabolism –degradation by “accident”
Enzyme-based transformations
Pesticide dependent
Soil dependent
Microbial ecology
Organic matter plays a big role
53. Adsorption in Soil What is “adsorption”?
Retention of pesticides by soil
Pesticide dependent
Soil dependent
Organic matter content ?, adsorption ?
Weak adsorption + long persistence ? worst for ground water
Adsorption ? = runoff in water
Adsorption ? = runoff with soil
54. Adsorption Coefficient Kd
Adsorbed concentration / dissolved concentration
Kd = Cs / Cw
Kd ? = strong adsorption
Koc
Koc = Kd / OC (%)
Adsorption is proportional to soil OC%
Koc < 100, weakly adsorbing
Koc > 1000, strongly adsorbing
60. Leaching Potential What is leaching?
Ability of pesticides to move through soil to reach groundwater
High leaching potential
Weak adsorption
Long persistence
Shallow groundwater table
Active water movement
Sandy texture
61. Leaching and Adsorption Retardation factor:
Reflect difficulty in moving with water
As R increases, rate of movement decreases
As Kd increases, rate of movement quickly decreases
62. GUS Index “GUS”
Groundwater Ubiquity Score
GUS = log(T1/2) * (4 – log(Koc))
Leaching risk
Gus > 2.8: high leaching risk
Gus < 1.8: low leaching risk
1.8 < GUS < 2.8: intermediate leaching risk
63. Groundwater-risk Pesticides
64. Runoff Potential Move in water
Diazinon, chlorpyrifos, many herbicides
Move with loose soil particles
synthetic pyrethroids
65. Runoff Long persistence + weak adsorption
? high runoff potential
Long persistence + strong adsorption
? intermediate runoff potential
Short persistence + weak adsorption
? Transient
Short persistence + strong adsorption
? Harmless
66. Contact Info: Jay Gan
Dept. Environmental Sciences
UC Riverside, CA 92521
jgan@mail.ucr.edu
(909) 787-2712