Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides

There is great concern over human exposure following the application of pesticides for the management of turf environments. This concern is expected and germane given the level and frequency of pesticide use, the extent of activities and time spent on turfgrass, and the exposure potential for infant...

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Main Author: Putnam, Raymond A
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3215913
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-43252020-12-02T14:31:19Z Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides Putnam, Raymond A There is great concern over human exposure following the application of pesticides for the management of turf environments. This concern is expected and germane given the level and frequency of pesticide use, the extent of activities and time spent on turfgrass, and the exposure potential for infants, children, and adults alike. Much effort has been expended in the determination of applicator exposure issues and the means to mitigate problematic exposure situations before and during application of pesticides. However, there are potential exposure concerns for all who enter turfgrass areas following pesticide applications. The present research emphasizes dosimetry (measuring pesticide residues on cotton suits, gloves, and air samplers worn by golfers) and biomonitoring (measuring pesticide metabolites in urine of golfers) in conjunction with environmental monitoring to determine transfer and penetration factors. The direct and simultaneous determination of dosimetry and biomonitoring data provides a novel and complete database on how much pesticide is transferred from the treated turf to the golfer during the play of a round of golf, where transfer takes place, and subsequently how much pesticide is actually absorbed. Dermal exposure was determined to be the dominant exposure pathway to golfers. Exposure estimates based on a 1 h re-entry interval following full-course and full-rate applications of chlorpyrifos, carbaryl, and cyfluthrin are substantially below current US EPA acute Reference Dose (Rfd) values, indicating safe exposures. These already low exposures were successfully mitigated using several management strategies. 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3215913 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Toxicology|Sports medicine
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Toxicology|Sports medicine
spellingShingle Toxicology|Sports medicine
Putnam, Raymond A
Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
description There is great concern over human exposure following the application of pesticides for the management of turf environments. This concern is expected and germane given the level and frequency of pesticide use, the extent of activities and time spent on turfgrass, and the exposure potential for infants, children, and adults alike. Much effort has been expended in the determination of applicator exposure issues and the means to mitigate problematic exposure situations before and during application of pesticides. However, there are potential exposure concerns for all who enter turfgrass areas following pesticide applications. The present research emphasizes dosimetry (measuring pesticide residues on cotton suits, gloves, and air samplers worn by golfers) and biomonitoring (measuring pesticide metabolites in urine of golfers) in conjunction with environmental monitoring to determine transfer and penetration factors. The direct and simultaneous determination of dosimetry and biomonitoring data provides a novel and complete database on how much pesticide is transferred from the treated turf to the golfer during the play of a round of golf, where transfer takes place, and subsequently how much pesticide is actually absorbed. Dermal exposure was determined to be the dominant exposure pathway to golfers. Exposure estimates based on a 1 h re-entry interval following full-course and full-rate applications of chlorpyrifos, carbaryl, and cyfluthrin are substantially below current US EPA acute Reference Dose (Rfd) values, indicating safe exposures. These already low exposures were successfully mitigated using several management strategies.
author Putnam, Raymond A
author_facet Putnam, Raymond A
author_sort Putnam, Raymond A
title Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
title_short Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
title_full Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
title_fullStr Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
title_full_unstemmed Golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
title_sort golfer exposure to turfgrass pesticides
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2006
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3215913
work_keys_str_mv AT putnamraymonda golferexposuretoturfgrasspesticides
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