Persistence characteristics of operationally sprayed fenitrothion in nearby unsprayed areas of a conifer forest ecosystem in New Brunswick
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B
- Vol. 22 (4) , 413-438
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03601238709372565
Abstract
Persistence characteristics of operationally sprayed fenitrothion were investigated in various substrates sampled from neighbouring unsprayed areas in New Brunswick. Air, water, sediment, aquatic plants, fish, balsam fir [Abies balsamea (L.) Mill] foliage, forest soil and litter samples were collected from random sampling locations selected within 200 m from the operational spray blocks. The same substrates were resampled from the same plots and from the same locations about a year later just prior to the commencement of the operational spraying. Control samples were collected from an unsprayed site, near Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. All samples were analysed for fenitrothion, by gas‐liquid chromatography. Except the fish samples all the substrates collected during the time of operational spraying contained low but detectable levels of fenitrothion. When collected a year later prior to the operational spray program, only balsam fir showed any detectable levels (detection limit, 0.01 ppm) of the chemical. All other samples showed no fenitrothion residues (detection limit for air, 10 ng/m3; for water, 0.01 ppb; and for other samples, 0.01 ppm). The findings confirmed that fenitrothion does not persist for an extended period of time in the aquatic substrates. The conifer foliage, however, showed persistent residues at a level of about 0.55 ppm even after the winter months, although there was no indication of accumulation of the chemical as a result of repeated exposure. The study demonstrated that the conifer needles acted as a micro sink for the chemical which showed a tendency to persist in the leaf tissues for a considerable length of time.Keywords
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