Atrazine and Metolachlor in Surface Runoff under Typical Rainfall Conditions in Southern Louisiana

Atrazine and metolachlor are commonly detected in surface water bodies in southern Louisiana. These herbicides are frequently applied in combination to corn, and atrazine to sugarcane, in this region. A study was conducted on the runoff of atrazine and metolachlor from 0.21 ha plots planted to corn...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of agricultural and food chemistry Vol. 51; no. 18; pp. 5355 - 5361
Main Authors Southwick, L. M, Grigg, B. C, Fouss, J. L, Kornecki, T. S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 27.08.2003
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Summary:Atrazine and metolachlor are commonly detected in surface water bodies in southern Louisiana. These herbicides are frequently applied in combination to corn, and atrazine to sugarcane, in this region. A study was conducted on the runoff of atrazine and metolachlor from 0.21 ha plots planted to corn on Commerce silt loam, a Mississippi River alluvial soil. The study, carried out over a three-year period characterized by rainfall close to the 30-year average, provided data on persistence in the surface soil (top 2.5 cm layer) and in the runoff active zone of the soil, as measured by decrease in runoff concentrations with time after application. Regression equations were developed that allow an estimate of the runoff extraction coefficients for each herbicide. Atrazine showed soil half-lives in the range 10.5−17.3 days, and metolachlor exhibited half-lives from 15.8−28.0 days. Concentrations in successive runoff events declined much faster than those in the surface soil layer:  Atrazine runoff concentrations decreased over successive runoff events with a half-life from 0.6 to 5.7 days, and metolachlor in runoff was characterized by half-lives of 0.6−6.4 days. That is, half-lives of the two herbicides in the runoff-active zone were one-tenth to one-half as long as the respective half-lives in the surface soil layer. Within years, the half-lives of these herbicides in the runoff active zone varied from two-thirds longer for metolachlor in 1996 to one-fifth longer for atrazine in 1995. The equations relating runoff concentrations of atrazine and metolachlor to soil concentrations contain extraction coefficients of 0.009. Losses in runoff for atrazine were 5.2−10.8% of applied, and for metolachlor they were 3.7−8.0%; atrazine losses in runoff were 20−40% higher than those for metolachlor. These relatively high percent of application losses indicate the importance of practices that reduce runoff of these chemicals from alluvial soils of southern Louisiana. Keywords: Atrazine; metolachlor; herbicide; runoff; corn; Mississippi River alluvial soil; runoff available residue
Bibliography:ark:/67375/TPS-BK4QXM4R-7
istex:E39FA8815B1F097BE6F7951E09897A7CEF5209D9
ISSN:0021-8561
1520-5118
DOI:10.1021/jf034049a