Ecological Engineering 18 (2001) 239 – 245
www.elsevier.com/locate/ecoleng
Short Communication
Concentration, load and toxicity of spraydrift-borne
azinphos-methyl at the inlet and outlet of a constructed
wetland
Ralf Schulz
a,
*, Sue K.C. Peall
b
, Corlie Hugo
c
, Victor Krause
c
a
Department of Zoology, Uniersity of Stellenbosch, Priate Bag X1, Matieland 7602, South Africa
b
Forensic Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Health, Cape Town 8000, South Africa
c
Helderberg Nature Resere, Somerset West 7129, South Africa
Received 15 June 2000; received in revised form 2 February 2001; accepted 16 February 2001
Abstract
Constructed wetlands have been widely used to treat different types of agricultural point and nonpoint source
pollution including nutrients, sediments and some herbicides. However, very little is known about the effectiveness of
constructed wetlands in controlling nonpoint source insecticide pollution. Here we describe the concentrations of total
suspended solids (TSS), nutrients and spraydrift-borne azinphos-methyl (AZP) at the inlet and outlet of a 0.44-ha
vegetated pond. One tributary, which receives contaminants from a 15-ha orchard area, flows directly through the
wetland, before it enters the Lourens River, South Africa. A tracer experiment with Rhodamin B was undertaken to
find the optimal timing for inlet and outlet sampling performance. The retentions of TSS, ortho -phosphate and nitrate
during dry weather conditions were 15, 54 and 70%. Concentration levels of AZP were reduced below the wetland by
90.8 0.7%, from 0.65 0.08 to 0.06 0.01 g/l(n =5). The reduction of AZP load was 54.1 3.8%. A 24-h in situ
bioassay employing midge larvae (Chironomus spec.) revealed a significant (ANOVA, Fisher’s PLSD; P 0.01)
reduction of toxicity. Mortality in two separate trials was 41.3 2.4% and 46.3 1.2% at the inlet station and
2.5 1.4 and 3.8 1.2% at the outlet station during days with spraydrift deposition into the tributary upstream of
the wetland. During time intervals without any spraying in the catchment, mortality of the midge larvae in both trials
was 1.2 1.2% at the inlet station and zero at the outlet station (n =4 for each trial). We conclude that construction
of small vegetated ponds is a suitable risk reduction strategy for agricultural nonpoint source insecticide input into
surface waters. © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Azinphos-methyl; Insecticide; In situ bioassay; Nonpoint source pollution; Retention; Spraydrift; Toxicity; Wetlands
* Corresponding author. Present address: Department of Limnology, Zoological Institute, Technical University Braunschweig,
Fasanenstrasse 3, D-38092 Braunschweig, Germany. Tel.: +49-531-3913184; fax: +49-531-3918201.
E-mail address: r.schulz@tu-bs.de (R. Schulz).
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