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Article Dans Une Revue Science of the Total Environment Année : 2014

Polar organic chemical integrative samplers for pesticides monitoring: Impacts of field exposure conditions

Résumé

This study focuses on how Polar Organic Chemical Integrative Samplers (POCIS) work in real environmental conditions. A selection of 23 polar pesticides and 8 metabolites were investigated by exposure of triplicates of integrative samplers in two rivers in France for successive 14-day periods. The pesticides and metabolites were trapped not only in Oasis HLB sorbent but also in the polyethersulfone (PES) membrane of the POCIS. The distribution of pesticides depended on the molecular structure. The use of the Performance Reference Compound (PRC) is also discussed here. The impact of someenvironmental parameters and exposure setup on the transfer of pesticides in POCIS sorbent was studied: river flow rate, biofouling on membranes, sampler holding design and position in the stream. Results show a significant impact of river flow velocity on PRC desorption, especially for values higher than 4 cm·s-1. Some fouling was observed on the PES membrane which could potentially have an impact on molecule accumulation in the POCIS. Finally, the positioning of the sampler in the river did not have significant effects on pesticide accumulation, when perpendicular exposureswere used (sampler positioning in front of the water flow). The POCIS with PRC correction seemsto be a suitable tool for estimating time-weighted average (TWA) concentrations, for all themolecules except for one of the nine pesticides analyzed in these two French rivers.

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Dates et versions

hal-02599877 , version 1 (16-05-2020)

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Citer

S. Lissalde, Nicolas Mazzella, Patrick Mazellier. Polar organic chemical integrative samplers for pesticides monitoring: Impacts of field exposure conditions. Science of the Total Environment, 2014, 488-489, pp.188-196. ⟨hal-02599877⟩
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