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Impact of Land Disturbance on the Fate of Arsenical Pesticides Abstract: Increasing development of historic farmlands raises
questions regarding the fate of pesticides applied when these land
were in cultivation. We quantified As and Pb budgets in field soils
in two orchards where arsenical pesticides were applied in the early
20th century and a third uncontaminated control field. Sequential extractions
and X-ray analyses also were used to determine mineral phases. In addition,
we measured metal loads in drainages adjacent to the fields and in
two common macroinvertebrate taxa within the wetland at the outlet
of the drainages. We find that the applied As and Pb have undergone
little vertical redistribution; concentrations of As and Pb in the
top 25 cm of contaminated orchard soils are higher than in the uncontaminated
control field. However, none of the applied lead arsenate (PbHAsO4)
remains in its original mineral phase. Instead, the metals are now
primarily adsorbed onto fine silt and clay-sized amorphous oxides and
organic matter. Further, physical erosion associated with tilling and
replanting appears to have mobilized the fine-particulate-bound As
and Pb in one orchard. The remobilized metals are found in sediments
in the stream channel draining the tilled orchard. It is unclear if
the As and Pb transported sediments are biologically active; average
macroinvertebrate metal burdens in the wetland are not elevated above
those observed elsewhere in the region. However, little of the mobilized
metals may have reached the wetland. These results demonstrate that
land use change can significantly impact the retention of arsenical
pesticides.
Renshaw CE, Bostick BC, Feng X, Wong CK, Winston ES, Karimi R, Folt CL and Chen CY. Impact of Land Disturbance on the Fate of Arsenical Pesticides. J Environ Qual. 2006 35(1): 61-67. |
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