Residue behavior and consumer risk assessment of spirotetramat and chlorpyrifos on cabbage heads and cropped soil.
Pankaj Sharma IstatuJatiender Kumar DubeySapna KatnaAjay SharmaSakshi SharmaDeepika ShandilNisha DeviArvind KumarShubhra SinghNimisha ThakurPublished in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2024)
A field experiment following good agricultural practices was laid out to study the dissipation of spirotetramat (90 g a.i. ha -1 and 180 g a.i. ha -1 ) and chlorpyrifos (400 g a.i. ha -1 and 800 g a.i. ha -1 ) on cabbage heads and soil. Samples were processed using quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, and safe (QuEChERS) method for residue estimation of spirotetramat and chlorpyrifos, which were further detected using HPLC-PDA and GC-FPD respectively. The residues of spirotetramat on cabbage heads reached below detection limit (BDL) (< 0.05 mg kg -1 ) on 7th and 10th day and for chlorpyrifos, BDL (< 0.01 mg kg -1 ) was achieved on 10th and 15th day for X and 2X dose, respectively. On 20th day after second spray, residues in soil were found to be BDL for both the pesticides. Half-life of spirotetramat and chlorpyrifos was found to be 3 and 2 days, respectively while a safe pre-harvest interval (PHI) of 9 days for spirotetramat and 10 days for chlorpyrifos is suggested on cabbage. The dietary risk assessment studies for various age groups of Indian population, ascertained safety of treated cabbage heads for consumption, as current study revealed that hazard quotient (HQ) < 1 and theoretical maximum dietary intake (TMDI) < maximum permissible intake (MPI) for both the pesticides at respective PHI.