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Effect of home food processing on chlordecone (organochlorine) content in vegetables. | LitMetric

Effect of home food processing on chlordecone (organochlorine) content in vegetables.

Sci Total Environ

Cirad/CAEC, UPR fonctionnement agroécologique et performances des systèmes de culture horticoles, B.P. 214 Petit Morne, Martinique, F-97232 Le Lamentin, France; Cirad, UR HortSys, TA B-103/PS4, Boulevard de la Lironde, F-34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.

Published: August 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Organochlorine pesticides, such as chlordecone, continue to pollute food, soil, and water many years after their use and ban, resulting in exposure to humans and ecosystems.
  • In a study focused on five vegetables commonly consumed in the French West Indies, boiling did not decrease chlordecone levels, indicating little effect on consumer exposure.
  • It was found that vegetable peels contained significantly higher levels of contamination compared to the pulp, suggesting that peeling and rinsing vegetables can reduce exposure, especially for produce grown in contaminated soils.

Article Abstract

Decades after their use and their ban, organochlorine pesticides still pollute soil, water and food and lead to human and ecosystem exposure. In the case of chlordecone, human exposure is mainly due to the consumption of polluted food. We studied the effect of preparation and cooking in five vegetable products, three root vegetables (yam, dasheen and sweet potato) and two cucurbits (cucumber and pumpkin), among the main contributors to exposure to chlordecone in food in the French West Indies. Boiling the vegetables in water had no effect on chlordecone content of the vegetables and consequently on consumer exposure. The peel was three to 40-fold more contaminated than the pulp except cucumber, where the difference was less contrasted. The edible part is thus significantly less contaminated and peeling is recommended after rinsing to reduce consumer exposure, particularly for food grown in home gardens with contaminated soils. The type of soil had no consistent effect on CLD distribution but plot did. Peel and pulp composition (lipids and fibers) appear to partially account for CLD distribution in the product.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.05.082DOI Listing

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