AI Article Synopsis

  • Groundwater in the Chalk aquifer is suffering from quality degradation due to the use of pesticides like atrazine, a widely detected contaminant.
  • The study was conducted in an underground quarry in Northern France to observe the transfer and degradation of atrazine over 2.5 years, measuring flow rates and water quality at 16 different sites.
  • Results reveal significant spatial variations in hydrodynamics and water quality, with findings suggesting that the unsaturated zone properties significantly impact how atrazine degrades and moves through the aquifer system.

Article Abstract

Groundwater in the Chalk aquifer is an important water resource whose quality has degraded due to fertilizer and pesticide use. Atrazine, classified as a priority substance, has been one of the most applied pesticides and also one of the most frequently detected pesticides in groundwater. The present study investigated the transfer and degradation of atrazine in the unsaturated zone of the Chalk aquifer in Northern France. The study was conducted in an underground quarry (Saint-Martin-le-Noeud), which provides a direct access to the water table and intercepts the unsaturated zone at different depths. The lake and the ceiling percolation of 16 sites throughout the quarry were followed. For 16 sites, the percolating flow rate and lake level were measured and the lake water was sampled for nitrate, atrazine and deethylatrazine (DEA, main degradation product of atrazine) analysis over 2.5 years. High spatial variations in hydrodynamics (percolating flow rate and lake level) and in lake water quality (atrazine between 55±11 and 202±40 ng L and DEA between 269±53 and 1727±345 ng L) indicate that the properties of the unsaturated zone influence the transfer and the degradation of atrazine. A counterclockwise hysteresis characterizes the relationship between the lake level and atrazine concentration. Temporal variation shows that the atrazine is transferred through the matrix and fractures with a delay caused by the sorption process that differs in atrazine and DEA. The layer of clay-with-flints is shown to favor the degradation of atrazine near the surface. Preferential pathways may be created below clay-with-flints, through which the transfer of atrazine is quicker.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2019.113125DOI Listing

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