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[Archive: 3 April 1999]
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It's raining pesticides
Fred Pearce and Debora Mackenzie
RAIN IS NOT what it used to be. A new study reveals that much of the
precipitation in Europe contains such high levels of dissolved pesticides
that it would be illegal to supply it as drinking water.
Studies in Switzerland have found that rain is laced with toxic
levels of atrazine, alachlor and other commonly used crop sprays. "Drinking
water standards are regularly exceeded in rain," says Stephan Müller, a
chemist at the Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and
Technology in Dübendorf. The chemicals appear to have evaporated from fields
and become part of the clouds.
Both the European Union and Switzerland have set a limit of 100
nanograms for any particular pesticide in a litre of drinking water. But,
especially in the first minutes of a heavy storm, rain can contain much more
than that.
In a study to be published by Müller and his colleague Thomas
Bucheli in Analytical Chemistry this summer, one sample of rainwater
contained almost 4000 nanograms per litre of 2,4-dinitrophenol, a widely
used pesticide. Previously, the authors had shown that in rain samples taken
from 41 storms, nine contained more than 100 nanograms of atrazine per
litre, one of them around 900 nanograms.
In the latest study, the highest concentrations of pesticides
turned up in the first rain after a long dry spell, particularly when local
fields had recently been sprayed. Until now, scientists had assumed that the
pesticides only infiltrated groundwater directly from fields.
Müller warns that the growing practice of using rainwater that
falls onto roofs to recharge underground water may be adding to the danger.
This water often contains dissolved herbicides that had been added to
roofing materials, such as bitumen sheets, to prevent vegetation growing. He
suggests that the first flush of rains should be diverted into sewers to
minimise the pollution of drinking water, which is not usually treated to
remove these herbicides and pesticides.
Meanwhile, Swedish researchers have linked pesticides to one of
the most rapidly increasing cancers in the Western world. Non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, which has risen by 73 per cent in the US since 1973, is probably
caused by several commonly used crop sprays, say the scientists.
Lennart Hardell of Orebro Medical Centre and Mikael Eriksson of
Lund University Hospital found Swedish sufferers of the disease were 2.7
times more likely to have been exposed to MCPA, a widely used weedkiller,
than healthy people (Cancer, vol 85 p 1353).
MCPA, which is used on grain crops, is sold as Target by the
Swiss firm Novartis. In addition, patients were 3.7 times more likely to
have been exposed to a range of fungicides, an association not previously
reported.
The patients were also 2.3 times more likely to have had contact
with glyphosate, the most commonly used herbicide in Sweden. Use of this
chemical, sold as Round-Up by the US firm Monsanto, is expected to rocket
with the introduction of crops, such as Roundup-Ready soya beans, that are
genetically modified to resist glyphosate. The researchers suggest that the
chemicals have suppressed the patients' immunity, allowing viruses such as
Epstein-Barr to trigger cancer.
From New Scientist, 3 April 1999
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">
It's raining pesticides
Fred Pearce and Debora Mackenzie
|
RAIN IS NOT what it used to be. A new study reveals that much of
the precipitation in Europe contains such high levels of dissolved
pesticides that it would be illegal to supply it as drinking water.
|
© Copyright New Scientist, RBI Limited 1999