The status of pesticide pollution in Tanzania

Talanta. 2004 Sep 8;64(1):48-53. doi: 10.1016/j.talanta.2003.11.047.

Abstract

The paper summarises the findings of recent studies carried out to assess the levels of pesticide residues in water, sediment, soil and some biota collected from different parts of Tanzania. Although the intention is to cover the whole country, so far the studies have focused on areas with known large-scale pesticide use (Southern Lake Victoria and its basin, TPC sugar Plantations in Kilimanjaro region, Dar es Salaam coast, Mahonda-Makoba basin in Zanzibar) and a former pesticide storage area at Vikuge Farm in Coast region). Analysis of the cleaned extracts in GC-ECD/NPD revealed the dominance of organochlorines in all samples. Generally, low levels of residues were found in areas associated with agricultural pesticide use but the levels in the former storage areas were substantially high. DDT and HCH were dominant in all the studied areas. In the former areas, levels of summation operatorDDT in water, sediments and soil were up to 2mugL(-1), 700mugkg(-1) and 500mugkg(-1), respectively, while those of summation operatorHCH were up to 0.2mugL(-1), 132mugkg(-1) and 60mugkg(-1), respectively. The levels in aquatic biota were much higher than those in the water most likely due to bioaccumulation. In the former storage area at Vikuge the levels of pesticides in the topsoil were alarmingly high. Their concentrations were up to 282,000mgkg(-1) dry weight for summation operatorDDT and up to 63,000mgkg(-1) for summation operatorHCH. A herbicide, pendimethalin [N-(1-ethylpropyl)-2,6-dinitro-3,4-xylidine], was also found at concentrations up to 41,000mgkg(-1) dry weight. Thus the total pesticide content in the soil was almost 40%. Following these findings the area is now earmarked to be a demonstration site for a proposed GEF project 'Bioremediation of POPs impacted soils in East Africa'.