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Author

Xavier Louchart

Other affiliations: SupAgro
Bio: Xavier Louchart is an academic researcher from Institut national de la recherche agronomique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface runoff & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 24 publications receiving 709 citations. Previous affiliations of Xavier Louchart include SupAgro.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The patterns of the loads at the field and watershed scales suggested that a major part of the herbicides leaving the fields reinfiltrated to the ground water by seepage through the ditches, and was there degraded or adsorbed.
Abstract: The contamination of soil and runoff water by two herbicides, diuron [N'-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-N,N-dimethylurea] and simazine (6-chloro-N,N'-diethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine), were monitored on two fields, one no-till and one tilled. Experiments were carried out in a 91.4-ha watershed in southern France during the 1997 growing season in order to understand the patterns of pesticide transport from field to watershed. The persistence of the herbicides in soil was prolonged due to the climatic conditions. At the field scale, annual herbicide loads were due to overland flow and amounted to 65.6 and 6.3 g ha(-1) of diuron for the no-till and tilled field, respectively, and to 29.6 and 1.83 g ha(-1) of simazine. Maximum herbicide concentrations exceeded 580 microg L(-1) during the first storm event after application and decreased thereafter but remained for 8 mo above 0.1 microg L(-1). At the watershed outlet, estimated annual loads amounted to 4.12 g ha(-1) of diuron and 0.56 g ha(-1) of simazine. Among them, 96% of the losses in diuron and 83% of those in simazine were caused by the fast transmission through the network of ditches of the overland flow exiting the fields. For diuron, which was sprayed over most of the vineyards, its in-stream concentrations during storm flow were close to those at the outlet of the fields. The herbicide loads in baseflow were smaller than 0.2 g ha(-1). The patterns of the loads at the field and watershed scales suggested that a major part of the herbicides leaving the fields reinfiltrated to the ground water by seepage through the ditches, and was there degraded or adsorbed.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) allowing the prediction of the fate of organic compounds in the environment from their molecular properties was done, and the combination of descriptors belonging to different categories led to improve QSAR performances.
Abstract: A comprehensive review of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) allowing the prediction of the fate of organic compounds in the environment from their molecular properties was done. The considered processes were water dissolution, dissociation, volatilization, retention on soils and sediments (mainly adsorption and desorption), degradation (biotic and abiotic), and absorption by plants. A total of 790 equations involving 686 structural molecular descriptors are reported to estimate 90 environmental parameters related to these processes. A significant number of equations was found for dissociation process (pKa), water dissolution or hydrophobic behavior (especially through the KOW parameter), adsorption to soils and biodegradation. A lack of QSAR was observed to estimate desorption or potential of transfer to water. Among the 686 molecular descriptors, five were found to be dominant in the 790 collected equations and the most generic ones: four quantum-chemical descriptors, the energy of the...

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed a dataset of 18 rainfall events including runoff and erosion data from fields of approximately 1200 m2 and 3200 m2 consisting of vineyards with two contrasting weeding practices, either superficial tillage or no-tillage with chemical weeding, from the outlet of a 0.91 km2 catchment that was 70% vineyard.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors monitored runoff discharge and concentrations of the two soil applied herbicides diuron [3-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-1,1-dimethylureal and simazine [6-chloro-N 2,N 4 -diethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4diamine] from two field sites-one tilled and one no-till-cropped with grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.; Cinsault and Aramon, respectively).
Abstract: The Mediterranean climate is characterized by a hot and dry summer where occasional storm events induce erosion and runoff. The high leaching potential of pesticides to surface waters under such climate conditions are not in relation to the main body of data that originated from summer-rain row-crop scenarios. In this 2-yr study we monitored runoff discharge and concentrations of the two soil applied herbicides diuron [3-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-1,1-dimethylureal and simazine [6-chloro-N 2 ,N 4 -diethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine] from two field sites-one tilled and one no-till-cropped with grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.; Cinsault and Aramon, respectively). Despite a time lag of 140 d in 1994 between chemical application and first runoff event, diuron concentrations in overland flow exceeded 200 μg L -1 at the no-till site. In 1995 the first strong rainfall-runoff event following application carried >87 and 60% of the respective seasonal simazine and diuron loss at both sites, although it accounted for <17 and 7% of the total runoff volume at the no-till and tilled site, respectively. At the no-till site, seasonal diuron loss during 1995 was 1.71% of applied; the corresponding value for simazine was 1.25%. Only 0.68 and 0.79% of the respective applied diuron and simazine mass were washed from the tilled field, reflecting differences in runoff volume between sites. Pesticide losses depended primarily on runoff volume and intensity. Event average herbicide concentrations in surface runoff followed an exponential decay over time. Estimated first order rate coefficients were at least twice as large as those derived from soil samples using the alcoholic solvent extraction technique. The decreasing water availability with time compared with the herbicide content at the soil surface indicated an increasing adsorption with time.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, water balance variables were monitored in a farmed Mediterranean catchment characterized by a dense ditch network to allow for the separate estimation of the diffuse and concentrated recharge terms during flood events.

48 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Ianis Delpla1, A.-V. Jung1, Estelle Baurès1, Michel Clément1, Olivier Thomas1 
TL;DR: The main conclusion can be drawn is that a degradation trend of drinking water quality in the context of climate change leads to an increase of at risk situations related to potential health impact.

777 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the agronomical variables and plant traits that can be estimated by remote sensing, and describe the empirical and deterministic approaches to retrieve them, and provide a synthesis of the emerging opportunities that should strengthen the role of remote sensing in providing operational, efficient and long-term services for agricultural applications.

631 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Submitted abstracts should clearly state the purpose, brief statement of procedure, results and conclusions, and include the name, full address and topic on all submissions.
Abstract: s should clearly state the purpose, brief statement of procedure, results and conclusions. Please include your name, full address and topic on all submissions. At least one author of each abstract should register for the conference. All accepted abstracts will be published as symposium proceedings. Additionally, commended abstracts may be published in a journal after they are expanded to a manuscript followed by extensive reviewing. The language of the conference will be English.

577 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The current knowledge on mitigation strategies to reduce pesticide inputs into surface water and groundwater, and their effectiveness when applied in practice is reviewed, and recommended measures considered both effective and feasible are recommended for implementing at the farm and catchment scale.

575 citations