Pesticides and their metabolites in selected surface-water public supplies in New York State, 1999

Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4119
Prepared in cooperation with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
By: , and 

Links

  • Document: Report (1.76 MB pdf)
  • Tables:
    • Table 1 (39.3 MB pdf) - Land use in drainage areas above the 18 water-supply sources in the three public-supply-sampling networks in New Yorksampled from May 1998 through September 1999
    • Table 2 (33.9 MB pdf) - Detection limits for the 60 pesticide and pesticide degradates for which samples from the public water-supply wells were analyzed, June-July 1999
    • Table 3 (21.5 MB pdf) - Metabolites detected in samples from public water-supply sites inNew York, January through May 1999, and their parent compounds andtypical uses of parent compounds
  • Download citation as: RIS | Dublin Core

Abstract

Sixteen different pesticides or their metabolites (degradations products) where detected in water samples collected in 1999 from three networks of lakes and reservoirs in upstate New York that are sources of public water supply. The networks sampled included the New York City network (10 reservoirs); the Finger Lakes-Great Lakes network (three Finger Lakes and two Great Lakes that supply large and small cities) and the western New York reservoir network (three reservoirs that supply small cities or towns).

The concentrations of the compounds detected in the samples generally were low. Only a few of the compounds detected had a concentration exceeding 1 mg/L (microgram per liter), and no compounds detected in the New York City reservoirs network had concentrations exceeding 0.05 mg/L. None of the compounds detected exceeded any Federal or State water-quality standard. Compounds that were most frequently detected, and whose concentrations were highest, were the three herbicides atrazine, metolachlor, and simazine, and two herbicide metabolites (the atrazine metabolite deethylatrazine, and the metolachlor metabolite metolachlor ESA). Most of these compounds, or their parent compounds, are used on corn or other row crops.

Median total pesticide and metabolite concentration for each network ranged from less than 0.02 mg/L for the New York City reservoirs network to more than 2 mg/L for the western New York reservoir network; the median for the Finger Lakes.Great Lakes network was about 0.1 mg/L. These differences reflect the amount of agricultural land use within each of the three networks, although other factors can affect pesticide and metabolite concentrations. The watersheds of the New York City reservoirs have the lowest percentage of agricultural land, and those of the western New York reservoirs have the highest. The highest herbicide or herbicide-metabolite concentrations among the New York City reservoirs were in the Cannonsville reservoir, whose watershed has a high percentage of agricultural land. The highest pesticide concentrations of the Lake sites were in Cayuga Lake, and the highest pesticide concentrations of the western New York reservoir sites were at the LeRoy reservoir.

The drought conditions in 1999 resulted in a general decrease in median total concentrations, and in the median number of detected compounds, in all networks, from January through September. Pesticide concentrations at the western New York reservoir sites were lower in 1999 than in 1998, as a result of the late-spring and early-summer drought conditions in 1999. Concentrations of pesticides in surface-water supplies are likely to be higher during years with normal or high streamflows than in years of drought, and the small reservoirs are likely to show a greater change in pesticide concentrations from drought year to nondrought years than the larger water bodies.

Suggested Citation

Phillips, P.J., Eckhardt, D.A., Smith, M.A., and Rosenmann, Larry, 2000, Pesticides and their metabolites in selected surface-water public supplies in New York State, 1999: U.S. Geological Survey Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000–4119, 16 p., https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/wri004119.

Study Area

Table of Contents

  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Study Methods
  • What are Metabolites?
  • Concentrations of Pesticides And Their Metabolites
  • Pesticide Concentrations in the Three Networks in Relation to Federal and State Water-Quality Standards
  • Differences in Pesticide Concentrations and Number of Compounds Detected Among Networks
  • Differences in Pesticide Concentrations and Number of Compounds Detected Within Networks
  • Use of Low Detection Limits
  • Seasonal Changes in Pesticide and Metabolite Concentrations
  • Summary
  • Acknowledgment
  • References Cited
Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Pesticides and their metabolites in selected surface-water public supplies in New York State, 1999
Series title Water-Resources Investigations Report
Series number 2000-4119
DOI 10.3133/wri004119
Year Published 2000
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Publisher location Reston, VA
Contributing office(s) New York Water Science Center
Description 16 p.
Country United States
State New York
Online Only (Y/N) N
Additional Online Files (Y/N) Y
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details