Abstract

Data on the adsorption and transformation rates of diazinon, parathion, tetrachlorvinphos and triazophos in soils were collected from a survey of the literature. As little information is available on their mobility, the adsorption of tetrachlorvinphos and triazophos on three soils was measured in a slurry experiment. Properties of diazinon were introduced into a computer model simulating glasshouse soil systems in a simplified way. The leaching of diazinon from the root zone was calculated to be zero. The properties of the other three organophosphates indicate that in similar computations leaching from the root zone would have been even lower.Samples from tile drains and water courses in areas with many glasshouses were analysed by gas-liquid chromatography. The concentration of the four organophosphate insecticides in almost all of the samples of water from tile drains was below the detectable limit. However in samples from the water courses, pesticide residues were found regularly, sometimes at fairly high concentrations. Thus contamination of water courses would seem to be produced not by leaching of pesticides through the soil but by other pathways.

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