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Assessment of the Dissipation Behaviors, Residues, and Dietary Risk of Oxine-Copper in Cucumber and Watermelon by UPLC-MS/MS.

Lu WangFengyu LiLingtao MengKai WangWenying LiFangming FanXiaobing ZhangXinyue JiangWei MuXiuyu Pang
Published in: ACS omega (2024)
During production, agricultural products are often susceptible to potential harm caused by residual traces of pesticides. Oxine-copper is a broad spectrum and efficient protective fungicide widely used in the production of fruits and vegetables. The present study was carried out to profile the dissipation behaviors and residues of oxine-copper on cucumber and watermelon using QuEChERS pretreatment and UPLC-MS/MS. Its storage stability and dietary risk assessment were also estimated. The method validation displayed good linearity ( R 2 ≥ 0.9980), sensitivity (limits of quantification ≤0.01 mg/kg), and recoveries (75.5-95.8%) with relative standard deviations of 2.27-8.26%. According to first-order kinetics, the half-lives of oxine-copper in cucumber and watermelon were 1.77-2.11 and 3.57-4.68 d, respectively. The terminal residues of oxine-copper in cucumber and watermelon samples were within <0.01-0.264 and <0.01-0.0641 mg/kg, respectively. Based on dietary risk assessment, the estimated long-term dietary risk probability value of oxine-copper in cucumber and watermelon is 64.11%, indicating that long-term consumption of cucumber and watermelon contaminated with oxine-copper would not pose dietary risks to the general population. The results provide scientific guidance for the rational utilization of oxine-copper in field ecosystems of cucumber and watermelon.
Keyphrases
  • risk assessment
  • ms ms
  • human health
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • heavy metals
  • climate change
  • liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • gas chromatography mass spectrometry