AI Article Synopsis

  • Propiconazole is commonly used in agriculture for fungal disease control in crops like celery and onion, raising environmental and health concerns.
  • A validated method using high-performance liquid chromatography detected propiconazole residues, with recovery rates between 85.7% and 101.8%, and half-lives of degradation for celery and onion were found to be about 6-8 days.
  • The study concludes that dietary exposure to propiconazole from these vegetables poses negligible risk to consumers, aiding in the establishment of safe usage guidelines and residue limits in China.

Article Abstract

Background: Propiconazole is widely used to control fungal diseases in field crops, including celery and onion. The potential risk to the environment and human health has aroused much public concern. Therefore, it is significant to investigate the degradation behaviour, residue distribution, and dietary risk assessment of propiconazole in celery and onion.

Results: A sensitive analytical method for determination of propiconazole residue in celery and onion was established and validated through high-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. The average recovery rate of propiconazole ranged from 85.7% to 101.8%, with a relative standard deviation of 2.1-6.3%. For the dissipation kinetics, the data showed that propiconazole in celery and onion was degraded, with half-lives of 6.1-6.2 days and 8.7-8.8 days respectively. In the terminal residue experiments, the residues of propiconazole were below 4.66 mg kg in celery after application two or three times and were below 0.029 mg kg in onion after application of three or four times with an interval of 14 days under the designed dosages. The chronic and acute dietary exposure assessments for propiconazole were valued by risk quotient, with all values being lower than 100%.

Conclusion: Propiconazole in celery and onion was rapidly degraded following first-order kinetics models. The dietary risk of propiconazole through celery or onion was negligible to consumers. The study not only offers a valuable reference for reasonable usage of propiconazole on celery and onion, but also facilitates the establishment of maximum residue limits in China. © 2020 Society of Chemical Industry.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.10817DOI Listing

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