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A pesticide emission model (PEM) Part II: model evaluation
Institution:1. CQM-UMa, Centro de Química da Madeira, Centro de Ciências Exactas e da Engenharia da Universidade da Madeira, Campus Universitário da Penteada, 9000-390 Funchal, Portugal;2. Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Coimbra, Azinhaga de Santa Comba, Celas, 3000-548 Coimbra, Portugal;3. Instituto Nacional de Medicina Legal e Ciências Forenses, I.P., Delegação Centro, Largo da Sé Nova, 3000-213 Coimbra, Portugal;1. Departamento de Ciências do Solo, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Av. Mister Hull, 2977, Fortaleza CE 60.021-970, Brazil;2. Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia do Piauí, Pio IX, Piauí, Teresina, Brazil.;3. Escola Superior de Agricultura “Luiz de Queiroz”, Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil.
Abstract:In the first part of the paper, the development of a numerical pesticide emission model (PEM) is described for predicting the volatilization of pesticides applied to agricultural soils and crops through soil incorporation, surface spraying, or in the furrow at the time of planting. In this paper the results of three steps toward the evaluation of PEM are reported. The evaluation involves: (i) verifying the numerical algorithms and computer code through comparison of PEM simulations with an available analytical solution of the advection/diffusion equation for semi-volatile solutes in soil; (ii) comparing hourly heat, moisture and emission fluxes of trifluralin and triallate modeled by PEM with fluxes measured using the relaxed eddy-accumulation technique; and (iii) comparison of the PEM predictions of persistence half-life for 29 pesticides with the ranges of persistence found in the literature. The overall conclusion from this limited evaluation study is that PEM is a useful model for estimating the volatilization rates of pesticides from agricultural soils and crops. The lack of reliable estimates of chemical and photochemical degradation rates of pesticide on foliage, however, introduces large uncertainties in the estimates from any model of the volatilization of pesticide that impacts the canopy.
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