| Literature DB >> 24398360 |
Summaiya Z Lari, Noor A Khan, Kavita N Gandhi, Tejal S Meshram, Neeta P Thacker1.
Abstract
The organochlorines (OClPs) and organophosphates (OPPs) pesticides in surface and ground water having intensive agriculture activity were investigated to evaluate their potential pollution and risks on human health. As per USEPA 8081 B method, liquid-liquid extraction followed by Gas-Chromatographic technique with electron capture detector and mass selective detector (GC-MS) were used for monitoring of pesticides. Among organochlorines, α,β,γ,δ HCH's, aldrin, dicofol, DDT and its derivatives, α,β endosulphan's and endosulphan-sulphate were analysed; dichlorovos, ethion, parathion-methyl, phorate, chlorpyrifos and profenofos were determined among organophosphates.As compared to ground water, higher concentrations of OClPs and OPPs were found in surface water. Throughout the monitoring study, α - HCH (0.39 μg/L in Amravati region),α - endosulphan (0.78 μg/L in Yavatmal region), chlorpyrifos (0.25 μg/L in Bhandara region) and parathion-methyl (0.09 μg/L in Amravati region) are frequently found pesticide in ground water, whereas α,β,γ-HCH (0.39 μg/L in Amravati region), α,β - endosulphan (0.42 μg/L in Amravati region), dichlorovos (0.25 μg/L in Yavatmal region), parathion-methyl (0.42 μg/L in Bhandara region), phorate (0.33 μg/L in Yavatmal region) were found in surface water.Surface water was found to be more contaminated than ground water with more number of and more concentrated pesticides. Among pesticides water samples are found to be more contaminated by organophosphate than organochlorine. Pesticides in the surface water samples from Bhandara and Yavatmal region exceeded the EU (European Union) limit of 1.0 μg/L (sum of pesticide levels in surface water) but were within the WHO guidelines for individual pesticides.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24398360 PMCID: PMC3895686 DOI: 10.1186/2052-336X-12-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Health Sci Eng
Figure 1Study area and sampling locations. (A): Map of India highlighting Vidarbha region, (B): Sampling location of Amravati, Yavatmal and Bhandara.
Gas Chromatograph conditions for pesticide analysis
| GC | Make – SHIMADZU | |
| | Model –GC-2010 (Auto sampler) | |
| Detector | Electron Capture Detector (ECD) | |
| Column | DB-5 column of 30 m length, 0.25 mm inner diameter (ID) & | |
| | film thickness of 0.25 μm | |
| | Organochlorines | Organophosphates |
| Injection volume | 1 μL | 1 μL |
| Injector temperature | 250°C | 220°C |
| Detector temperature | 300°C | 270°C |
| Carrier gas flow rate | 0.95 mL/min | 0.87 mL/min |
| Oven programming | 70°C (2 min hold) to 160°C | 150°C (1 min hold) to 225°C |
| @ 15°C/min to 270°C @ 5°C/min (18 min hold) | @ 5°C/min (10 min hold) | |
| Total run-time | 48 min | 26 min |
Figure 2Chromatogram showing retention time for Organochlorine.
QA/QC data of organochlorine pesticides
| Alpha-HCH | 0.067 | 0.226 | 70.51 | 0.011 - 0.041 |
| Beta-HCH | 0.045 | 0.15 | 74.91 | 0.009 - 0.017 |
| Gamma-HCH | 0.058 | 0.196 | 71.12 | 0.005 - 0.039 |
| Delta-HCH | 0.064 | 0.213 | 82.42 | 0.047 - 0.127 |
| Dicofol | 0.039 | 0.13 | 96.24 | 0.014 - 0.053 |
| Aldrin | 0.047 | 0.157 | 69.72 | 0.006 - 0.12 |
| Alpha-endosulphan | 0.042 | 0.14 | 83.99 | 0.009 - 0.022 |
| pp’ DDE | 0.041 | 0.135 | 74.5 | 0.005 - 0.018 |
| op’ DDD | 0.046 | 0.153 | 72.08 | 0.012 - 0.091 |
| Beta-endosulphan | 0.046 | 0.155 | 89.49 | 0.013 - 0.048 |
| Endosulphan sulphate | 0.07 | 0.235 | 100.93 | 0.014 - 0.146 |
Minimum to maximum range of concentrations of pesticides (μg/L)
| HCH | ND-0.06 | ND-0.06 | ND-0.39 | ND-0.39 | ND-0.08 | ND |
| Endosulphan | ND-0.72 | ND-0.08 | ND-0.60 | ND-0.42 | ND-0.78 | ND |
| DDT | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| Dichlorovos | ND-0.09 | ND-0.20 | ND-0.08 | ND-0.20 | ND-0.07 | ND-0.25 |
| Chlorpyrifos | ND-0.25 | ND-0.44 | ND-0.11 | ND-0.26 | ND-0.18 | ND-0.44 |
| Phorate | ND | ND-0.31 | ND | ND-0.19 | ND | ND-0.33 |
| Parathion-methyl | ND-0.03 | ND-0.42 | ND-0.09 | ND-0.15 | ND-0.02 | ND-0.17 |
Figure 3Average of individual pesticide detected in Bhandara region.
Figure 4Average of individual pesticide detected in Yavatmal region.
Figure 5Average of individual pesticide detected in Amravati region.