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Joseph Domagalski
Journal of Hydrology, v. 192, p33-50
A nested surface water monitoring network was designed and tested to
measure variability in pesticide concentrations in the San Joaquin River
and selected tributaries during the irrigation season. The network design
and sampling frequency necessary for determining the variability and distribution
in pesticide concentrations were tested in a prototype study. The San Joaquin
River Basin, California, was sampled from April to August, 1992, a period
during the irrigations season where there was no rainfall. Orestimba Creek,
which drains a part of the western San Joaquin Valley, was sampled three
times per week for 6 weeks. A site on the San Joaquin River near the mouth
of the basin, and an irrigation drain of the eastern San Joaquin Valley,
were sampled weekly during the entire sampling period. Pesticides were
most often detected in samples collected from Orestimba Creek. Pesticide
concentrations of Orestimba Creek showed greater temporal variability when
samples three times per week than when sampled once a week, due to variations
in field management and irrigation. The implication for the San Joaquin
River basin (an irrigation-dominated agricultural setting) is that frequent
sampling of tributary sites is necessary to describe the variability in
pesticides transported to the San Joaquin River. © 1997 Elsevier Science
B.V.
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