Pesticide fate in sodded kentucky bluegrass lawns in response to irrigation

2012 
Abstract Fertilizers and pesticides applied to home lawns can contaminate surface and groundwater making them unfit for aquatic organisms and human consumption. Application of fertilizers and pesticides can improve the aesthetics of a home lawn, improve turfgrass shoot and root density, water use, organic matter accumulation, and other factors known to be influential in urban hydrology. A field study determined the impact of applying home landscape pesticides with or without supplemental irrigation of leaching into groundwater or runoff to surface water. Free-draining lysimeters having a sandy loam soil (coarse-loamy, mixed, active, mesic Lamellic Hapludalf) were used to monitor total volume and nutrients and pesticides losses. Samples from natural precipitation events were analysed for pendimethalin [N-(1-ethylpropyl)-3,4-dimethyl-2, 6-dinitrobenzenamine] applied in spring, mecoprop [2-(4-Chloro-2-methylphenoxy) propionic acid]+2, 4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) applied both in late spring and early...
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