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Current-use insecticides, phosphates and suspended solids in the Lourens River, Western Cape, during the first rainfall event of the wet season


Ralf Schulz
Sue KC Peall
James M Dabrowski
Adriaan J Reinecke

Abstract

Pesticide contamination resulting from agricultural runoff depends on the time period between application and rainfall. In Western Cape orchard areas, the last pesticide application of the growing season in summer takes place at the end of February. Pesticides, total phosphates and total suspended solids (TSS) were measured in the Lourens River at the beginning of April 1999 prior to the first rainfall of the rainy season and in the middle of April during high discharge following the first rainfall of 9.6 mm/d. Pre-runoff samples indicated only contamination with total endosulfan (α, β, sulphate) at levels up to 0.06 µg/l. Runoff during the first rainfall event resulted in an increase in the levels of endosulfan, chlorpyrifos and azinphos-methyl, to 0.16.


WaterSA Vol.27(1) 2001: 65-70

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1816-7950
print ISSN: 0378-4738