Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
Narrow vegetative filter strips proved to effectively reduce herbicide runoff from cultivated fields mainly
due to the ability of vegetation to delay surface runoff, promote infiltration and adsorb herbicides. A field
trial was conducted from 2007 to 2009 in north-east Italy in order to evaluate the effectiveness of various
types of vegetative filter strips to reduce spring-summer runoff of the herbicides mesotrione, metolachlor
and terbuthylazine, widely used in maize, and to evaluate the effect of the rainfall characteristics on the
runoff volume and concentration. Results show that without vegetative filter strip the herbicide load that
reaches the surface water is about 5-6 g/ha/year for metolachlor and terbuthylazine (i.e. 0.5-0.9% of
the applied rate), confirming that runoff from flat fields as in the Po Valley can have a minor effect on the
water quality, and that most of the risk is posed by a few, or even just one extreme rainfall event with a
return period of about 25-27 years, causing runoff with a maximum concentration of 64-77 microg/L.
Mesotrione instead showed rapid soil disappearance and was observed at a concentration of 1.0-3.8 microg/L
only after one extreme (artificial) rainfall. Vegetative filter strips of any type are generally effective and can
reduce herbicide runoff by 80-88%. Their effectiveness is steady even under severe rainfall conditions,
and this supports their implementation in an environmental regulatory scheme at a catchment or
regional scale.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Buffer strips; Mesotrione; Metolachlor; Terbuthylazine; Rainfall return period
Elenco autori:
Zanin, Giuseppe; Otto, Stefan
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