Current-use and legacy pesticides' multi-annual trends in air in central Europe: primary and unidentified secondary sources

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Authors

MAYER Ludovic, Thierry MELYMUK Lisa Emily HOLUBOVÁ ŠMEJKALOVÁ Adéla KALINA Jiří KUKUČKA Petr MARTINÍK Jakub PŘIBYLOVÁ Petra ŠENK Petr SHAHPOURY Pourya LAMMEL Gerhard

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/25/12467/2025/
Doi https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-25-12467-2025
Keywords PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS; POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC-HYDROCARBONS; LONG-TERM TRENDS; ATMOSPHERIC CONCENTRATIONS; ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES; AMBIENT AIR; POLYCHLORINATED-BIPHENYLS; STOCKHOLM CONVENTION; SEASONAL-VARIATIONS; FLAME RETARDANTS
Attached files
Description This study investigated 48 current-use pesticides (CUPs) and 30 organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in ambient air at a rural-agricultural site in the Czech Republic, with biweekly sampling over three and 10 years, respectively. Despite being banned decades ago, OCPs persist in the atmosphere, with revolatilisation from surfaces apparent in summer. Temporal trend analysis revealed decreasing atmospheric concentrations for several OCPs, which indicate long-term diminishing reservoirs in environmental compartments, especially soil. For beta- and gamma-HCH, o,p '- and p,p '-DDE, o,p '-DDD, o,p '- and p,p '-DDT, alpha-chlordane, and mirex, levelling off is observed, which points to recently enhanced secondary sources in the region or beyond, related to reversal of the direction of air-surface exchange in response to historic atmospheric depositions or recent mobilisation from ground compartments, such as water bodies, the cryosphere, or soils heated by wildfires.CUP concentrations peaked during application seasons, with multi-annual trends either insignificant or declining. For compounds like chlorpyrifos and fenpropimorph, declining trends aligned with regulatory bans, though their presence in the atmosphere was evident one-year after the bans, suggesting persistence.
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