California Water Science Center Newsroom
Wide range of pesticides found in rivers flowing into California’s Salton SeaNovember 5, 2008 Read report Contact: USGS detects more than two dozen compounds in the Alamo and New rivers U.S. Geological Survey researchers continue to find a wide variety of current-use and legacy pesticides in rivers flowing into the Salton Sea, California’s largest lake. In two earlier studies in 2001 through 2003, USGS scientists detected 18 compounds in the water and 19 in sediments in the New and Alamo rivers and in the Whitewater River, which flows into the sea from the Coachella Valley. USGS hydrologist and co-author Jim Orlando said improved laboratory methods allowed for the analysis of a greater number of pesticides. They also gave scientists the ability to detect compounds at much lower concentrations. “We more than doubled the number of pesticides we were looking for, and we detected a number of new compounds, including fungicides and pyrethroid insecticides,” he said. The report, “Pesticides in water and suspended sediment of the Alamo and New Rivers, Imperial Valley/Salton Sea Basin, California, 2006–2007,” U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 365, is available online. The authors are USGS scientists James Orlando, Kelly Smalling and Kathryn Kuivila. The most frequently detected compounds in the water samples were chlorpyrifos, DCPA, EPTC, and trifluralin, which were observed in more than 75 percent of the samples. Of the 34 pesticides found in sediments, 14 were organochlorine pesticides such as DDT, the majority of which have not been used in the United States for decades. In multiple water samples, they found concentrations of the pesticides carbofuran, chlorpyrifos, diazinon and malathion that exceeded aquatic-life “benchmarks” established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). EPA benchmarks are estimates of the concentrations above which pesticides can have adverse effects on fish, invertebrates and other aquatic life. They provide an indication of the environmental impact of measured pesticide concentrations, and they could be used to identify sites and pesticides for further investigations. The USGS Pesticide Fate Research Group has been studying the transport and fate of pesticides in the Salton Sea watershed for more than a decade. Previous reports have documented the presence of current-use and legacy pesticides in water, suspended sediments and bed sediments in the Salton Sea and in the three major rivers that flow to the sea. Pesticide concentrations have been found to be generally greater in the Alamo River than the New and the Whitewater rivers, and greater in the rivers than in the Salton Sea itself. ### The U.S. Geological Survey's California Water Science Center operates project offices in Sacramento and San Diego where more than 130 scientists bring a broad range of disciplines to modern water-management issues. The center also has nine field offices where scientists and technicians gather hydrologic data on California's surface-water and ground-water resources. USGS provides science for a changing world. |
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