Ana Carolina Pereira Paiva, Vanessa Lopes de Freitas, Leonardo d'Antonino, Maria Eliana Lopes Ribeiro de Queiroz, Antonio Alberto da Silva
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The impairment of productivity and harvest of coffee beans by weeds is more accentuated when the infestation occurs between the flowering and fruiting periods of the coffee plant. However, controlling these plants with herbicides, such as glyphosate, can result in crop contamination and accumulation of the herbicide in coffee beans through the drift during application. In this sense, this work sought to determine the stage of development of the coffee crop at which the application of the herbicide glyphosate does not result in the contamination of coffee beans. Glyphosate was applied in lower doses in 5 different stages of the coffee plant, from bean formation to maturation (cherry beans), with one application per plant for each stage evaluated, in addition to the controls, which did not receive herbicide application. After complete maturation, the grains were harvested, pulped, dried, and analyzed by LC-MS/MS to determine the concentration of glyphosate. Herbicide residues were detected in four of the five selected stages, at concentrations lower than the LOQ (0.5 mg kg-1), but were not detected in the cherry maturation stage. These results indicate the translocation of the herbicide and accumulation in the grains, compromising the quality of the commercialized grains.
期刊介绍:
Food Additives & Contaminants: Part A publishes original research papers and critical reviews covering analytical methodology, occurrence, persistence, safety evaluation, detoxification and regulatory control of natural and man-made additives and contaminants in the food and animal feed chain. Papers are published in the areas of food additives including flavourings, pesticide and veterinary drug residues, environmental contaminants, plant toxins, mycotoxins, marine biotoxins, trace elements, migration from food packaging, food process contaminants, adulteration, authenticity and allergenicity of foods. Papers are published on animal feed where residues and contaminants can give rise to food safety concerns. Contributions cover chemistry, biochemistry and bioavailability of these substances, factors affecting levels during production, processing, packaging and storage; the development of novel foods and processes; exposure and risk assessment.