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  4. Small scale spatial variability of atrazine and dinoseb adsorption parameters in an alluvial soil
 
research article

Small scale spatial variability of atrazine and dinoseb adsorption parameters in an alluvial soil

Mermoud, A.  
•
Martins, J.M.F.
•
Zhang, D.
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2007
Journal of Environmental Quality

Soil sorption processes largely control the environmental fate of herbicides. Therefore accuracy of sorption parameters is crucial for accurate prediction of herbicide mobility in agricultural soils. A combined experimental and statistical study was carried out to investigate the small scale spatial variability of sorption parameters for atrazine and dinoseb in soils and to establish the number of samples needed to provide a value of the distribution coefficient (Kd) next to the mean, with a given precision. The study explored sorption properties of the two herbicides in subsurface samples collected from four pits distributed along a transect of an alluvial soil; two to four samples were taken at very short distances apart (about 30 cm), at each sampling location. When considering all the data available, the distribution coefficients were found to be normally and log-normally distributed for atrazine and dinoseb, respectively; the coefficients of variation were relatively high (close to 50% for dinoseb and 40% for atrazine). When analyzed horizon by horizon, the data revealed distribution coefficients normally distributed for both herbicides, whatever the soil layer, with lower coefficients of variation. The Kd values were shown to vary considerably between samples collected at very short distance (a few centimeters), suggesting that taking a single soil sample to determine sorption properties through batch experiments can lead to highly unrepresentative results and to poor sorption/mobility predictions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.2134/jeq2007.0298
Author(s)
Mermoud, A.  
Martins, J.M.F.
Zhang, D.
Favre, A.C.  
Date Issued

2007

Published in
Journal of Environmental Quality
Volume

37

Issue

5

Start page

1929

End page

1936

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
February 1, 2008
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/17379
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