| Literature DB >> 27878481 |
Zhenlan Xu1, Changpeng Zhang2, Jianzhong Yu2, Chunrong Zhang2, Min Wu2, Hongmei He2, Yahong Zhu2, Fangyuan Lou2, Yuanyuan Wu2, Yanhua Wang2, Liezhong Chen2, Hua Zhao2, Qiang Wang2, Leiming Cai3.
Abstract
Cyazofamid, as a fungicide of the novel cyanoimidazole chemical class, has been widely used to control tomato late blight. Understanding of cyazofamid residues in environment and crops is an essential prerequisite for its risk assessment. In this study, field investigations in four typical tomato-producing areas were conducted to explore the dissipation kinetics and residues of cyazofamid and its primary metabolite 4-chloro-5-p-tolylimidazole-2-carbonitrile (CCIM) in soil and tomato. A robust method using QuEChERS coupled with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was developed for simultaneous analysis of cyazofamid and CCIM, with limits of quantification of 0.33 and 3.8 μg/kg, respectively. Field trials showed that the half-lives of cyazofamid were 3.6-6.9 days in soil and 12.2-18.3 days in tomato. The total residues of cyazofamid and CCIM in tomato collected at three time intervals were all below 0.5 mg/kg. Moreover, the potential risks of total residues via tomato intake to ten population subgroups were evaluated. We found that the risk quotient values were all generally low (0.13-1.3%), indicating that the recommended dose of cyazofamid on tomato will not result in a consumer exposure exceeding the toxicological reference value. Here, the results of field investigation provided important information for further understanding the behavior and risk of cyazofamid in the natural environment.Entities:
Keywords: CCIM; Cyazofamid; Dissipation; Residues; Risk assessment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27878481 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-016-8106-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223