Abstract

The application of synthetic pesticides to agricultural fields for the protection of crops leads to the formation of residues in soils. While the short-term behavior of pesticide residues in soils after an application is generally known from laboratory and field studies required for authorization (prospective risk assessments), there is still a lack of in-situ observations that address their long-term fate. Long-term soil monitoring programs, with comprehensive site-specific records of pesticide application data, constitute an invaluable, complementary, retrospective exposure assessment tool to address this gap. Considering the pesticide applications over the past 10–15 years, this study assessed the occurrence of pesticides in agricultural soils of Switzerland and put their presence or absence, as well as their concentrations, in the context of their previous application. The results showed that pesticides could also be detected at sites without a connection to previous applications and that small residual mass fractions of pesticides, even of some non-persistent compounds, were found in soils, years or decades after their last application. This finding points to an environmental issue that may not be adequately captured in prospective risk assessment and calls attention to the need for comprehensive long-term recording and monitoring as a complementary retrospective exposure assessment.

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