The impact of agricultural runoff on the quality of two streams in vegetable farm areas in Ghana.
- 1. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
- 2. International Water Management Institute
- 3. University of Ghana
- 4. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education
Description
A study of two small streams at Akumadan and Tono, Ghana, was undertaken during the rain and dry season periods between February 2005 and January 2006 to investigate the impact of vegetable field runoff on their quality. In each stream we compared the concentration of current-use pesticides in one site immediately upstream of a vegetable field with a second site immediately downstream. Only trace concentrations of endosulfan and chlorpyrifos were detected at both sites in both streams in the dry season. In the wet season, rain-induced runoff transported pesticides into downstream stretches of the streams. Average peak levels in the streams themselves were 0.07 microg L(-1) endosulfan, 0.02 microg L(-1) chlorpyrifos (the Akumadan stream); 0.04 microg L(-1) endosulfan, 0.02 microg L(-1) chlorpyrifos (the Tono stream). Respective average pesticide levels associated with streambed sediment were 1.34 and 0.32 microg kg(-1) (the Akumadan stream), and 0.92 and 0.84 microg kg(-1) (the Tono stream). Further investigations are needed to establish the potential endosulfan and chlorpyrifos effects on aquatic invertebrate and fish in these streams. Meanwhile measures should be undertaken to reduce the input of these chemicals via runoff.
Publication Details
Journal article
Funding
Financial Support
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
Read more
References
Scholarly Citations
MeSH Terms
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary for indexing biomedical articles.
Click any term to view its definition and hierarchy.
Chemical Substances
4 chemical substances identified from Medical Subject Headings (MeSH).