Abstract

A procedure is described for the determination of the total concentration of organophosphorus pesticides in aqueous solution based on conversion of the compounds to orthophosphoric acid by oxygen-flask combustion and spectrophotometric determination as phosphomolybdenum blue. The procedure is particularly sensitive when preceded by efficient and selective accumulation of pesticides. The adsorption of malathion, parathion and phosalone on Amberlite XAD-4 resin from 1 l of 7–36 μM water solutions, followed by combustion of 500 μl of eluate yields of orthophosphoric acid with 90–105% recoveries. The detection limit is ca. 150 ng ml −1 pesticide in an aqueous sample. Inorganic phosphates and most of some commonly present non-pesticide phosphorus compounds are eliminated from the water sample during the adsorption step. In combination with a test for monitoring traces of cholinesterase inhibitors in surface waters, the determination of the total amount of organophosphorus pesticides as a cumulative parameter offers reliable information on the pollution level of the water environment. Application of such a combined procedure to a pond water from an apple orchard showed good correlation between phosphrus content and the cholinesterase inhibition.

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