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Journal ArticleDOI

Herbicide Transport to Surface Waters at Field and Watershed Scales in a Mediterranean Vineyard Area

Xavier Louchart, +3 more
- 01 May 2001 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 3, pp 982-991
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TLDR
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.

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Citations
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Mitigation strategies to reduce pesticide inputs into ground- and surface water and their effectiveness; A review

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Assessing pesticide concentrations and fluxes in the stream of a small vineyard catchment--effect of sampling frequency.

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Effects of vegetation management intensity on biodiversity and ecosystem services in vineyards: A meta-analysis.

TL;DR: It is concluded that vegetation cover in inter‐rows contributes to biodiversity conservation and provides multiple ecosystem services, however, in drier climates grape yield might decrease without irrigation and careful vegetation management, and agri‐environmental policies should therefore focus on granting subsidies for the establishment of locally adapted diverse vegetation cover on vineyard inter‐row.
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Influence of spatial variations of microtopography and infiltration on surface runoff and field scale hydrological connectivity

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Pesticide Content of Surface Water Draining from Agricultural Fields—A Review

TL;DR: The literature on pesticide losses in runoff waters from agricultural fields is reviewed in this paper, where the majority of commercial pesticides, total losses are 0.5%0 or less of the amounts applied, unless severe rainfall conditions occur within 1-2 weeks after application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pesticide concentration patterns in agricultural drainage networks in the lake Erie Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present information on pesticide concentrations in Lake Erie tributaries draining agricultural watersheds, information distilled from data sets spanning nearly a decade and including up to 750 samples per tributary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water Quality in Walnut Creek Watershed: Herbicides and Nitrate in Surface Waters

TL;DR: In this article, the surface water quality of Walnut-creek watershed with about 86% of the land used for crop production was investigated. But, the authors did not report any quantitative information describing the impact of farming on water quality at the watershed scale.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infiltration characteristics of soils in Mediterranean vineyards in Southern France

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined factors affecting the spatial variability of soil infiltration in cultivated fields in a Mediterranean environment and found that 40% of the total variance of observed infiltration rates can be explained either by differences between fields or by differences in local topsoil structure.
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