Occurrence of azole and strobilurin fungicides in indoor dust from three cities of China

Widespread use of fungicides has raised the concern of exposure to them among the general population. However, there are extremely limited studies reporting the occurrence of fungicides in indoor dust in China. This study aimed to determine ten agricultural fungicides in indoor dust samples collecte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2022-07, Vol.304, p.119168-119168, Article 119168
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Juan, Wan, Yanjian, Jiang, Ying, Xia, Wei, He, Zhenyu, Xu, Shunqing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Widespread use of fungicides has raised the concern of exposure to them among the general population. However, there are extremely limited studies reporting the occurrence of fungicides in indoor dust in China. This study aimed to determine ten agricultural fungicides in indoor dust samples collected in three cities of China from 2016 to 2019, assess spatial and seasonal variations, and estimate the related exposure via dust ingestion. Six out of ten fungicides including difenoconazole, prochloraz, tebuconazole, tricyclazole, azoxystrobin, and pyraclostrobin were frequently detected in the dust samples (ranged 65.8–97.7%) and the concentrations of some fungicides showed a strong correlation with each other. Difenoconazole was the most abundant one among the selected fungicides. The highest level of the selected fungicides was observed in the indoor dust collected from Wuhan in summer 2019 (median cumulative concentration of the fungicides: 62.6 ng/g), while the relatively low concentrations of fungicides were found in the dust from Taiyuan (2.08 ng/g). Heavier fungicide contamination was observed in urban districts compared to that in rural districts. Seasonal variations in the fungicide residuals were also identified. The exposure assessment suggested that intake of the selected fungicides via dust ingestion was much lower than dietary intake reported in other studies. This study filled the data gap of fungicide residuals in the indoor dust in China and further studies are needed to identify the sources and determinants of indoor fungicide contamination. [Display omitted] •Six out of ten fungicides were frequently detected in all indoor dust samples.•North China had lower levels of the fungicides in dust than central and south China.•Higher fungicide levels were observed in urban districts than in rural districts.•Seasonal variations in fungicide contamination indoors were found.•The first study on the occurrence of multiple fungicides in indoor dust from China.
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119168