TY - JOUR A1 - Spill, Caroline A1 - Gassmann, Matthias T1 - Long‐term sulfamethazine leaching simulation in two different soils using the MACRO model Y1 - 2022-03-10 VL - 51 IS - 3 SP - 364 EP - 376 JF - Journal of Environmental Quality DO - 10.1002/jeq2.20337 PB - N2 - Physically based models have been part of many risk assessment studies concerning pesticide or nutrient transport within (sub)catchments or at plot scale, but they are only poorly validated for simulating the transport of veterinary medicinal products. Veterinary medicinal products not only pose a risk to the quality of our waters but also tend to accumulate in soils, where they are associated with the appearance of resistant bacteria and long‐term leaching. In this study, the physically based leaching model MACRO 5.2 was applied for simulating sulfamethazine (SMZ) transport over a period of more than 10 yr. The model was set up using reversible kinetic adsorption and equilibrium adsorption forming non‐extractable residues. Two different calibration periods were used to estimate uncertainties in predicted SMZ leaching associated with calibration based on short‐term data. Using the whole period for model calibration, SMZ leaching could be simulated adequately, but parameter ranges were wide due to correlation between the parameters. When using only the first period for calibration, the quality of the prediction strongly depended on the information content of the data set. The calculation of temporal sensitivity indices revealed that the effect of complex sorption parameters on the model output increased with time. Thus, parameters that appeared insensitive in a short‐term calibration were required for reliable long‐term simulations. In conclusion, a temporal sensitivity analysis beyond the calibration period might identify parameters that were not constrained enough by the calibration procedure. This could help to confirm leaching predictions even for periods without sampling data. N2 - Core Ideas: The MACRO model was successfully used to simulate long‐term SMZ leaching. A high information content of short‐term SMZ leaching data was key to successful long‐term simulations. The effect of environmental fate parameters (sorption, degradation) on the model outcome may change over time. Implementing complex sorption processes was mandatory for SMZ long‐term simulation. Temporal sensitivity analysis beyond the calibration span may detect parameters required for long‐term simulation. UR - http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/10063 ER -