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Quantifying Inputs of Pesticides to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park – A Case Study in the Herbert River Catchment of North-East Queensland
Authors:A.K.L Johnson and S.P Ebert
Affiliation:

aCSIRO Tropical Agriculture, 120 Meiers Road, Indooroopilly, Qld 4068, Australia

bCSIRO Tropical Agriculture, PMB PO Aitkenvale, Qld 4814, Australia

Abstract:The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park (GBRMP) is an ecosystem whose ecological features are recognized internationally. There is a need to evaluate the impacts of historical and contemporary changes in land use on the GBRMP. This paper quantifies pesticide inputs in the Herbert River catchment of North Queensland in the context of changes in land use over the last 100 years. We show that three major phases of rural land use and land cover change have occurred, with large areas of native vegetation converted to agricultural production. The increase in agricultural land has seen a corresponding increase in the area receiving pesticides. We present data showing application histories for organochlorine, organophosphate, phenoxy, triazine, urea, mercurial and azole group pesticides. While the fate of these pesticides in aquatic and marine systems is largely unknown, these trends pose a significant challenge for agricultural industries in complying with the principles of ecologically sustainable development (ESD).
Keywords:insecticides   herbicides   fungicides   land use   Herbert River catchment   Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
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