Publication details

An updated status of currently used pesticides in India: Human dietary exposure from an Indian food basket

Authors

SOMAN Sidhi CHRISTIANSEN Agnethe FLORINSKI Roman BHARAT Girija STEINDAL Eirik Hovland NIZZETTO Luca CHAKRABORTY Paromita

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Environmental Research
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.117543
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.117543
Keywords Currently used pesticides; Food samples; Metropolitan and non-metropolitan city; Exposure dosage; Health-risk analysis
Description Currently used pesticides (CUPs) were introduced to have lower persistence and bioaccumulation, and lesser bioavailability towards non-target species. Nevertheless, CUPs still represent a concern for both human health and the environment. India is an important agricultural country experiencing a conversion from the use of obsolete organochlorine pesticides to a newer generation of phytosanitary products. As for other developing countries, very little is known about the transfer of CUPs to the human diet in India, where systematic monitoring is not in place. In this study, we analyzed ninety four CUPs and detected thirty CUPs in several food products belonging to five types: cereals and pulses, vegetables, fruits, animal-based foods, and water. Samples were taken from markets in Delhi (aggregating food produced all over India) and in the periurban area of Dehradun (northern India) (representing food produced locally and through more traditional practices). Overall, chlorpyrifos and chlorpropham were the most detected CUPs with a detection frequency of 33% and 25%, respectively. Except for vegetables and fruits, the levels of CUPs in all other food types were significantly higher in samples from Delhi (p < 0.05). Exposure dosage of CUPs through different food matrices was calculated, and chlorpropham detected in potatoes had the maximum exposure dosage to humans (2.46 x 10(-6) mg/kg/day). Risk analysis based on the hazard quotient technique indicated that chlorpyrifos in rice (2.76 x 10(-2)) can be a concern.

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