Severe water pollution issues due to legacy and contemporary pesticides exist in tropical regions and are linked to cash crops requiring intensive plant protection practices. This study aims to improve knowledge about contamination routes and patterns in tropical volcanic settings to identify mitigation measures and analyse risk. To this aim, this paper analyses four years of monitoring data from 2016 to 2019 of flow discharge and weekly pesticide concentrations in the rivers of two catchments grown predominantly with banana and sugar cane in the French West Indies. The banned insecticide chlordecone, applied in banana fields from 1972 to 1993, was still the major source of river contamination, while the currently used herbicide glyphosate, its metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA), and postharvest fungicides also exhibited high contamination levels. A value of 0.5 of the Gustafson Ubiquity Score (GUS) was shown to separate contaminant and noncontaminant pesticides, indicating a high vulnerability to pollution by pesticides in this tropical volcanic context. The patterns and routes of river exposure to pesticides differed markedly between the pesticides in accordance with the hydrological behaviour of volcanic islands and the history and nature of pesticide uses. Concerning chlordecone and its metabolites, observations confirmed previous findings of a main subsurface origin of river contamination by this compound but also showed large erratic short-term variations, suggesting the influence of fast surface transport processes such as erosion for legacy pesticides with large sorption capacity. Concerning herbicides and postharvest fungicides, observations have suggested that surface runoff and fast lateral flow in the vadose zone control river contamination. Accordingly, mitigation options need to be considered differently for each type of pesticide. Finally, this study points out the need for developing specific exposure scenarios for tropical agricultural contexts in the European regulation procedures for pesticide risk assessment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164815 | DOI Listing |
Unlabelled: "Single Model initial-condition Large Ensembles" (SMILEs) conducted with Earth system models have transformed our ability to quantify internal climate variability and forced climate change at local and regional scales. An important consideration in their experimental design is the choice of initialization procedure as this influences the duration of initial-condition memory, with implications for interpreting the temporal evolution of both the ensemble-mean and ensemble-spread. Here we leverage the strategic design of the 100-member Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2) SMILE to investigate the dependence of ensemble spread on the method of initialization (micro- vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
November 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia.
The tall eucalypt forests (TEFs) of the Australian tropics are often portrayed as threatened by 'invasive' neighboring rainforests, requiring 'protective' burning. This framing overlooks that Australian rainforests have suffered twice the historical losses of TEFs and ignores the ecological and paleobiological significance of rainforest margins. Early Eocene fossils from Argentina show that biodiverse rainforests with abundant Eucalyptus existed > 50 million years ago (Ma) in West Gondwana, shaped by nonfire disturbance factors such as landslides and volcanic flows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrop Med Infect Dis
October 2024
Armauer Hansen Research Institute, Addis Ababa P.O. Box 1005, Ethiopia.
The adoption of supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) as a partial replacement of Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC) is increasing in anticipation of reducing the carbon footprint of cement and concrete industry. The resistance of concretes with SCMs against natural carbonation (a reactive-diffusion mechanism) is still a topic of research. Most literature adopt accelerated carbonation tests (under constant humidity and temperature conditions) to estimate the natural carbonation depth (d) in concrete.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2024
Laboratoire 2GPMH, Département de Géologie, Faculté des Sciences, Université Mohamed Premier, Oujda 60000, Morocco.
The end-Triassic extinction (ETE) on land was synchronous with the initial lavas of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) and occurred just after the brief 26 thousand year (kyr) reverse geomagnetic polarity Chron E23r that can be used for global correlation. Lava-by-lava paleomagnetic secular variation data, previously reported from Morocco and northeastern United States combined with our data for the North Mountain Basalt from the Fundy Basin of Canada show that the initial phase of CAMP volcanism occurred in only five directional groups or pulses each occupying less than a century. The first four directional groups occur during a ~40 kyr period based on available astrochronology and U-Pb geochronology.
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