Abstract

A vertical one-dimensional analysis of infiltration processes and mobility of a tracer (potassium bromide) and a glyphosate-based herbicide, both subjected to hydrological forcing, was performed. Glyphosate is a widespread herbicide whose potential harmfulness and mobility under hydrological forcing have not been fully understood yet. Here, the spatio-temporal evolution of the two compounds was monitored for one year in two experimental sites (Settolo - Valdobbiadene, Colnù - Conegliano), located within the production area of the Prosecco wine (Treviso, Italy). In each experimental site the activities were carried out on two 25 m2 plots located at distances of 50-100 m from each other. The interpretative analyses considered rainwater infiltration as the driving mechanism of the herbicide transport and allowed us to obtain the calibration of a one-dimensional hydrologic model in each monitored plot. Different scenarios of the tracer evolution were simulated considering the pedologic properties of the shallower soil layers, the status of the plant coverage and of the root apparati, leading to a satisfactory reproduction of the observations in both the experimental sites. Modeling the mobility of the herbicide, considering also the degradation to its metabolite AMPA, proved to be more challenging, due to the tendency of glyphosate to be adsorbed to the soil matrix rather than be dissolved in water and transported toward deeper soil layers. Nevertheless, the analysis of model results for tracer and herbicide, compared with in situ observations, suggests that the transport of the glyphosate can take place even when it is adsorbed to the soil, through the movement, triggered by intense precipitation events, of microscopic soil particles within preferential flow paths.

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