Font Size: a A A

Use of soil and vegetative filter strips for reducing pesticide and nitrate pollution

Posted on:1998-04-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Liaghat, AbdolmajidFull Text:PDF
GTID:1463390014474468Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
The use of agricultural chemicals often results in water pollution. This research, comprising three parts, was designed to investigate the role of soil and grass strips and water table management in reducing pesticide and nitrate residues in drainage waters.; The first part of the research was made on lysimeters to investigate the effects of soil and grass cover under two water table management regimes. Four treatments were involved: subsurface drainage, controlled drainage, grass cover, and bare soil. Each treatment consisted of three replicates. Contaminated water containing atrazine, metolachlor, and metribuzin residues was applied to the lysimeters and samples of drain effluent were collected. Significant reductions in pesticide concentrations were found in all treatments.; In the first year (1993), herbicide levels were reduced significantly, from an average of 250 μg/L to less than 10 μg/L. In the second year (1995), water polluted at a concentration of 50 μg/L, was applied to the lysimeters, and herbicide residues were reduced significantly to less than 1 μg/L. Subsurface drainage and grass cover lysimeters (SDG treatment) reduced herbicide concentration levels to a greater extent than the other treatments and the controlled drainage lysimeters reduced nitrate concentration levels to a greater extent than the free drainage lysimeters.; The second part of the research was a field study that reports the development and testing of an on-farm pollution control system using soil as a biological filter for trapping herbicide residues. A field site with four shallow surface ditches, underlain with four perforated drain pipes, was used to carry-out field measurements. Polluted water with concentration levels of 30 mg/L of nitrate and 100 μg/L of three commonly-used herbicides was applied to the ditches for 10 days continuously; and no water was applied for the following ten days. This cycle was repeated three times. Water samples were collected both before application and after the water came out of the drains. Herbicide levels were reduced significantly in drainage waters. The average concentration level of nitrate in drainage water was found to be 17 mg/L in comparison to 30 mg/L in applied water. Also, the bio-degradation of herbicide residues in the soil was found to occur between water applications. Thus, it appears that the system would be self-sustainable in the long term.; The third part of the research utilizes a water table model, DRAINMOD, for simulating drainage waters from agricultural land and a solute transport model, PRZM2, for simulating pesticide concentrations in the drain effluent coming out of the grass filter area. DRAINMOD was used to estimate the daily drain outflows that would occur in a 100 ha subsurface drained field in the for a 1-in-20 year annual rainfall period. It was found that 6% of the farm area could be used to bring down the concentrations in drainage water from 50 μg/L to less than 1 μg/L for the three herbicides. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)...
Keywords/Search Tags:Water, Drainage, Three, Soil, Nitrate, Pesticide, Herbicide, Concentration
Related items