13 Prediction of Herbicides Concentration in Streams Raj Mohan Singh Department of Civil Engineering, MNNIT Allahabad, India 1. Introduction Natural and anthropogenic variables of stream drainage basins such as hydrogeologic parameters (permeability, porosity etc.), amount of agricultural chemicals applied, or percentage of land planted affect agricultural chemical concentration and mass transport in streams. The use of herbicides, pesticides, and other chemicals in agricultural fields increase the concentration of chemicals in streams which severely affects the health of human and environment. The transport of chemical pollutants into river or streams is not straight forward but complex function of applied chemicals and land use patterns in a given river or stream basin. The factors responsible for transport of chemicals may be considered as inputs and chemical concentration measurements in streams as outputs. Each of these inputs and outputs may contain measurement errors. Present work exploited characteristics of fuzzy sets to address uncertainties in inputs by incorporating overlapping membership functions for each of inputs even for limited data availability situations. Soft computing methods such as the fuzzy rule based and ANN (Artificial Neural Networks) is used for characterization of herbicides concentration in streams. The fuzzy c-means (FCM) algorithm is used for the optimization of membership functions of fuzzy rule based models for the estimation of diffuse pollution concentration in streams. The general methodology based on fuzzy, ANN and FCM for estimation of diffuse pollution in streams is presented. The application of the proposed methodology is illustrated with real data to estimate the diffuse pollution concentration in a stream system due to application of a typical herbicide, atrazine, in corn fields with limited data availability. Solution results establish that developed fuzzy rule base model with FCM outperform fuzzy or ANN and capable for the estimation of diffuse pollution concentration values in water matrices with sparse data situations. Application of pesticides, insecticides and herbicides, cause diffuse pollution, commonly referred to as non-point source pollution in river or streams. Diffuse pollution from agricultural activities is a major cause of concern for the health of human and environment. Diffuse (non-dot, dispersed) pollution generally arises from land-use activities (urban and rural) that are dispersed across a catchment or subcatchment, where as point sources of pollution arise as a process industrial effluent, municipal sewage effluent, deep mine or farm effluent discharge (Novotny 2003, based on CIWEM (D’Arcy et al., 2000)). Potential point sources of pollution is characterised by its location, magnitude and duration of activity; and the sources of pollution is characterized when these parameters are identified