4.7 Article

Historical and post-ban releases of organochlorine pesticides recorded in sediment deposits in an agricultural watershed, France

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 288, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117769

Keywords

Organochlorine pesticides; Temporal trends; Sediment cores; Post-ban releases; Sediment characteristics; Organic matter

Funding

  1. Seine-Normandie Water Agency (France) [OSS 276]
  2. CNRS toward EC2CO grant (Avant-Seine project)
  3. Region Normandie
  4. CNRS

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Organochlorine pesticides were widely used in agriculture during the twentieth century, leading to their persistence in soils and sediments. Sediment deposits can help reconstruct the chronology of OCP releases, and the interactions between OCPs and organic matter may result in overestimation of post-ban releases. The detection of stable metabolites of banned pesticides in deep soils erosion highlights the reemergence of transformation products from historical OCPs.
Agricultural use of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) increased during the twentieth century but many of them have been progressively banned several decades after their introduction. Nevertheless, these lipophilic chemical compounds may persist in soils and sediments. From sediment deposits, it is possible to reconstruct the chronology of OCP releases in relation to former applications through time. Nevertheless, long-term fate of OCPs i.e. source, transfer, and storage through the watershed, is also related to the OCPs-sediment characteristics interactions, and our study showed the significant links between OCPs and labile or refractory organic matter. From sediment cores collected in a mainly agricultural watershed, the Eure River watershed (France), aldrin and lindane widespread applications during the 1950s-1970s have been recorded. While lindane applications declined after that date, according to the temporal trend of the stable isomer of hexachlorocyclohexane (I3-HCH), alpha-, and gamma-HCH have been recorded at significant levels in the 2000s, suggesting first local post-ban applications. Nevertheless, the relationships between these OCPs and labile organic matter resulted in an overestimation of the post-ban releases. Also, the detection of stable metabolites of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) (i.e. 4,4 ' DDE) and heptachlor (i.e. heptachlor epoxide) several decades after their ban, revealed the role of old deep soils erosion in the chronology of OCP releases and thus the reemergence of stable transformation products from historical OCPs.

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