ABSTRACT
Preferential
Movement of Pesticides and Tracers in Agricultural Soils
Tammo S. Steenhuis, Ward Staubitz, Marc S. Andreini, Jan Surface, Tom L. Richard,
Robert Paulsen, Nigel B. Pickering, James R. Hagerman, and Larry D. Geohring
Carbofuran, alachlor, atrazine, bromide
(a tracer), and nitrate are applied to two tile-drained plots of corn, one of
which is conventionally tilled and another that is no-till. Soil water samples
are collected from the plots with suction lysimeters and ground-water samples
are collected from wells and tile drains. The no-till plot first showed low
concentrations of atrazine and alachlor ranging from 0.1 to 0.4 \Gmg/1 below
the root zone one month after application, but the conventionally tilled plot
showed no pesticides below the root zone until late fall, when atrazine was
detected at 0.4 \Gmg/1. Dye studies indicated that, in the no-till plots, some
of the pesticide bypasses the root zone through surface-connected macropores,
whereas in the conventionally tilled plot, most of the pesticide is adsorbed
within the root zone as a result of greater contact with the soil. Concentrations
of bromide (which is not adsorbed) in samples collected from wells and suction
lysimeters do not differ between the two plots for samples collected from wells
and suction lysimeters. Nitrate is found only in that part of the profile that
remains unsaturated throughout the experiment.