Calibration and field evaluation of the Chemcatcher® passive sampler for monitoring metaldehyde in surface water

Glenn Castle, Graham Mills, Adil Bakir, Anthony Gravell, Melanie Schumacher, Ian Townsend, Lewis Jones, Richard Greenwood, Stuart Knott, Gary Fones

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    Abstract

    Metaldehyde is a potent molluscicide. It is the active ingredient in most slug pellets used for crop protection. This polar compound is considered an emerging pollutant. Due to its environmental mobility, metaldehyde is frequently detected at impacted riverine sites, often at concentrations above the EU Drinking Water Directive limit of 0.1 µg L−1 for an individual pesticide. This presents a problem when such waters are abstracted for use in the production of potable water supplies, as this chemical is difficult to remove using conventional treatment processes. Understanding the sources, transport and fate of this pollutant in river catchments is therefore important. We developed a new variant of the Chemcatcher® passive sampler for monitoring metaldehyde comprising a Horizon Atlantic™ HLB-L disk as the receiving phase overlaid with a polyethersulphone membrane. The sampler uptake rate (Rs) was measured in semi-static laboratory (Rs = 15.7 mL day−1) and in-field (Rs = 17.8 mL day−1) calibration experiments. Uptake of metaldehyde was linear over a two-week period, with no measurable lag phase. Field trials (five consecutive 14 day periods) using the Chemcatcher® were undertaken in eastern England at three riverine sites (4th September-12th November 2015) known to be impacted by the seasonal agricultural use of metaldehyde. Spot samples of water were collected regularly during the deployments, with concentrations of metaldehyde varying widely (~ 0.03–2.90 µg L−1) and often exceeding the regulatory limit. Time weighted average concentrations obtained using the Chemcatcher® increased over the duration of the trial corresponding to increasing stochastic inputs of metaldehyde into the catchment. Monitoring data obtained from these devices gives complementary information to that obtained by the use of infrequent spot sampling procedures. This information can be used to develop risk assessments and catchment management plans and to assess the effectiveness of any mitigation and remediation strategies.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)57-63
    JournalTalanta
    Volume179
    Early online date22 Nov 2017
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2018

    Keywords

    • RCUK
    • NERC
    • NE/L009145/1

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