Basic Project Information:
Title: Well and Interstitial Water Crop Protection
Chemicals Study on the Salina Fan Delta Aquifer
Duration: 2002-2004
Principal Investigators:
José A. Dumas Rodriguez (Principal Investigator)
Crop Protection Department
Agricultural Experiment Station, Rio Piedras
University of Puerto Rico
Mayaguez Campus.
Rafael Montalvo-Zapata- Ad-honorem
Crop Protection Department
Agricultural Experiment Station, Rio Piedras
University of Puerto Rico
Mayaguez Campus.
Focus Categories: TS, WQL,
WL
Congressional district: N/A
Statement of critical water problems
This project examines the groundwater and interstitial
water quality, toxic substances and nonpoint contamination in the
Jobos Basin Estuarine Reserve. The Jobos Bay is located between the
Salinas and Guayama municipalities in the south coast of Puerto Rico
and comprises more than 2,500 acres, including a forest and a mangrove.
The Jobos Estuaries Ecosystem has been severely stressed since the
late 80's by land and water channels alterations which have changed
the water flow patters of the zone. One of the key issues that needs
to be addressed in Puerto Rico and worldwide is the pesticide and
phthalate esters movement in soil and groundwater and their effects
over sensitive environmental zones, including flora, fish and wildlife.
Non-managed application of pesticides and other compounds that reach
non target sites may result in leaving residues where crops will later
be planted or where they may reach surface and ground water resources.
No intensive research in Puerto Rico related to organic pollution
in the Jobos mangrove zone has been carried out. The proposed field
and laboratory research will be the first one that will help provide
a more comprehensive view of water quality in the zone and will be
complementary to another research project related to nitrate levels
currently underway in the zone. Statement
of the results or benefits:
The expected benefits of the research proposed
will be the development and advancement of new scientific information
related to pesticide and organic toxic residues in the groundwater
and interstitial water in the Salinas and Guayama municipalities.
Agriculture is expected to continue in the zone, and water sampling
for the presence of crop protection chemicals is necessary to ensure
human health and the protection and conservation of the environment.
The project will also provide data for risk/benefit decisions concerning
chemical usage. Data for the year 2002-2003 will be analyzed, interpreted
and results, findings and conclusions will be submitted for either
technical papers on referred journals, oral presentations and posters
during the following year. There will be one or two publications associated
with the completion of the research. Nature,
scope and objectives of the research:
Before the late 1970's, ground water contamination
from field applied pesticides were virtually unexpected. It was
assumed that pesticides in the natural environment would break down
or be adsorbed into the soil, sand, gravel, and rock formations.
Currently human activities such as organic compounds applied for
crop protection can clearly lead to contamination of surface and
groundwater and thus indirectly affecting estuaries and associated
wetlands interstitial water and soil quality (Panke, 2000; Snedaker,
1981). The water quality and humidity content of soil will affect
first the microbial population of the zone, influencing nutritional
chain, and many other biological and biochemical processes, including
plant absorption, metabolism and microbial degradation of organic
matter and other natural and anthropogenic chemicals. Therefore,
pesticides and other toxic anthropogenic source compounds in water-soil
environment are a public and environmental concern problems that
deserve further investigation in this region. The south coastal
plains of Puerto Rico were used as agricultural lands for sugarcane
cultivation until the mid 70's: After a diversification program
established by the Puerto Rico Department of Agriculture, bananas
and plantains, legumes, vegetables and tropical fruits production
has intensified in the last twenty-five years. Groundwater in the
Salinas municipality is used for potable water and agricultural
purposes, extracting close to three million gallons per day (Molina,
1998) Some pesticides currently used in the zone are very soluble
in water suggesting a high potential to move by runoff and leaching
to reach surface and groundwater, hence affecting its quality and
eventually reaching estuaries, wetlands and marine ecosystems. The
Salinas Fan Delta is the major aquifer in the Guayama, Salinas and
Santa Isabel zone and is recharging the water in the Jobos Estuarine
Natural Reserve (Gomez, 1990; Gonzalez, 1999). Although intensive
agricultural practices have been carried out in this zone, no comprehensive
study has conducted to assess to the presence, runoff, leaching,
degradation and fate of agrochemicals, and other anthropogenic source
compounds.
The project's objective is to determine the
presence, levels and seasonal variability of agrochemicals in groundwater
in the zone near the Jobos Basin. The magnitude of adsorption of
the detected pesticides on the main agricultural soils and wetland
soils found in the zone. This will serve as an index for selection
of more adequate soils and agricultural management practices to
avoid pesticide contamination and further disruption of the Jobos
Estuaries Ecosystem. This research will help address pesticide groundwater
contamination in Puerto Rico and pinpoint management practices,
to save and protect Jobos Basin. The specific objectives of the
research are: 1) Survey water wells and interstitial water in the
Jobos Basin zone to identify and quantify the major pesticides and
phthalates esters, and the levels of nitrate-nitrite, phosphates,
dissolved oxygen and other types of compounds from anthropogenic
sources. 2) Determine the microbial mass present in the Jobos estuaries
zone and its relationship to the mangrove health, organic and inorganic
compounds present in interstitial water and dissolved oxygen (DO).
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