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Original Articles

Determination of atrazine and degradation products in Luxembourgish drinking water: origin and fate of potential endocrine-disrupting pesticides

, , , &
Pages 1041-1054 | Received 05 Jan 2011, Accepted 05 Apr 2011, Published online: 27 Jun 2011
 

Abstract

Several pesticides have been hypothesized to act as endocrine-disrupting compounds, exhibiting hormonal activity and perturbing normal physiological functions. Among these, especially s-triazine herbicides have received increased attention. Despite being banned in many countries, including the European Union, atrazine is still the world's most widely used herbicide. Despite its discontinued use, considerable concentrations of atrazine and its degradation products, mainly desethylatrazine (DEA) and deisopropylatrazine (DIA), are still found in the environment, including drinking water sources. The aim of this investigation was to study concentrations of especially s-triazine herbicides and major degradation products in drinking water, including spring water, tap water and bottled water in Luxembourg. Spring water (2007/2008/2009, n = 69/69/69), tap water (2008/2009, n = 19/26), and bottled water (2007/2008/2009, n = 5/13/7) were sampled at locations in Luxembourg and investigated for pesticides by LC-ESI-MS/MS. Atrazine was the predominant triazine, detectable in many spring water locations, tap and bottled water, ranging (mean) from 0–57 (9), 0–44 (4), and 0–4 (1) ng l−1, respectively. DEA and DIA in spring water ranged (mean) from 0–120 (19) and 0–27 (3) ng l−1, with higher concentrations from agricultural areas and low molar ratios of DEA:atrazine <0.5 and high ratios of atrazine:nitrate suggesting point-source contamination. Levels (mean) of DEA and DIA in tap water were 0–62 (14) and 0–6 (<1) ng l−1 and in bottled water 0–11 (2) and 0–7 (2) ng l−1. Simazine and other triazines were detected in traces (<5 ng l−1). Thus, the conducted monitoring suggested the presence of low concentrations of s-triazines in raw and finished water, presumably partly due to non-agricultural contamination, with concentrations being below thresholds advocated by the European Union Directive 98/83/EC.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Mr Jean-François Iffly and Mr François Barnich for aiding in the water collection, Ms Johanna Ziebel for helping in the pesticide measurements, Ms Sonia Heitz for cartographic assistance, and Mr N. Pundel and Mr G. Zimmer from the Service des Eaux de la Ville de Luxembourg for their advice and cooperation in the planning of this study. The authors further appreciate the critical reading by Dr Laurent Pfister. They are grateful for the FNR grant support within the SECAL call (Grant Number 030705).

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