Occurrence of current-use pesticides in sediment cores from lakes and peatlands in pristine mountain areas of Brazilian national parks
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 2025 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Environmental Pollution |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
web | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0269749125003781?via%3Dihub |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2025.126005 |
Keywords | Agrochemicals; Subtropical mountains; Protected areas; CUPs; Ecological risk assessment |
Description | This study assessed the occurrence of current-use pesticides in sediment cores from six lakes and peatlands in high-altitude (1952-2374 m) pristine areas within two southeastern Brazilian National Parks: Itatiaia National Park (IT-NP) and Serra dos Orgaos National Park (SO-NP). We sampled three sediment cores from lakes at IT-NP and three from peatlands at SO-NP, totaling 60 subsamples. Among the 38 current-use pesticides assessed, 17 were found in at least one sample, with 14 - including herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, and acaricides identified in both parks. The most frequently detected pesticides were carbendazim and carbaryl (75-95%), followed by acetochlor, chlorpyrifos, diuron, metolachlor and tebuconazole (40-70%) and, to a lesser extent, terbuthylazine and malathion (10-30%). The organophosphates disulfoton (6.83 +/- 20.18 ng g- 1 dry weight) and chlorpyrifos (4.34 +/- 6.81 ng g- 1 dw) registered the highest concentrations across all compounds in the sediment layers, with chlorpyrifos showing the greatest relative abundance (65.9-92.8%) in four out of six sites. Risk characterization results revealed highest risk quotient (RQ) values (416-14,589) for chlorpyrifos, indicating potential ecological risks. High RQs were also obtained for acetochlor (5.76-94.6), carbaryl (0.4-4.08), carbendazim (0.09-3.46), diazinon (2048), disulfoton (34-569), diuron (1.45-35.0) and malathion (10.94). These results highlight the threat posed by long-range pesticide transport to pristine areas at National Parks. Urgent regulatory measures are needed to mitigate their impact and safeguard these ecosystems from degradation. |
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