Horticultural use of copper-based fungicides has not increased copper concentrations in sediments in the mid- and upper Yarra Valley
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 15:25authored byAdam Wightwick, George Croatto, Suzie ReichmanSuzie Reichman, Neal Menzies, Vincent Pettigrove, Graeme Allinson
The use of Cu-based fungicide can pose a risk to nearby surface water bodies due to the run-off of accumulated Cu from agricultural soils. In 2008, we conducted a reconnaissance survey of the presence and concentration of copper in sediments at 18 sites within the Yarra River Catchment, an important horticultural production system in south-eastern Australia. Observed Cu concentrations in sediment samples from the study sites (mean (95 % confidence interval) 12.0 (10.6-13.6) mg/kg dry weight) were similar to the concentrations present in the samples from the reference sites (mean (95 % confidence interval) 12.0 (6.7-16.8) mg/kg dry weight). The data on Cu and other metals in the sediments suggest that that there is unlikely to have been wide spread, diffuse, off-site transport of Cu from the soils of horticultural properties to nearby surface waterways in the Yarra River Catchment and that that observed sediment metal concentrations are unlikely to pose an ecological risk to sediment-dwelling organisms at the study sites.
History
Journal
Water, Air and Soil Pollution: an international journal of environmental pollution