Abstract

Macro and micro elemental nutrient profiles and compositions of toxic heavy metals in food items are important attributes in culinary and nutrition sciences. We selected ripen bael fruits of elite accessions selected for large-scale cultivation in Sri Lanka, Kankong, a green leafy vegetable prone to bioaccumulation of toxic heavy metals (market and commercially available samples) and shoot-tops of sweet potato, an underutilized leafy vegetable to detect the elemental compositions using X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and Inductive Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometric (ICP-MS) methods. Bael pulp was extracted from ripe fruits and, Kankong and sweet potato shoot-tops were collected. The presence and absence of elements were assessed using XRF. The elemental contents were measured using ICP-MS, and statistically analyzed. Bael and SP samples did not contain toxic heavy metals As and Pb whereas Kankong samples collected from a municipal wastewater drain contained all these toxic elements in large quantities. Kankong samples purchased from open market contained Hg, Cd, As and Cr. It is also noted that Pb separately correlated with Cr, Fe, Co, Zn, Ni and Hg contents in Kankong implying that they are under a common absorption mechanism or coming from a common source in the polluted habitat. The present study concludes that Kankong in Sri Lanka is unsafe for consumption and SP is an alternative to replace Kankong.

Highlights

  • The macro and micronutrients present in the food are essential for a healthy life

  • It is evident from the graphical X-ray fluorescence (XRF) outputs that toxic heavy metals were absent in ripen bael fruits and sweet potato (SP)

  • Since SP shares the same genus with Kankong, SP shoot-tops can be considered as an alternative to Kankong which are more prone to bioaccumulation of toxic heavy metals

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Summary

Introduction

The macro and micronutrients present in the food are essential for a healthy life. The exact amounts of these elements present in the food items must be measured to understand the nutritional balance of the diets and to produce the value-added products in large-scale. Bael (Aegle marmelos L.) is a medicinal fruit species that has been subjected to many pharmacological and nutritional research studies. The elemental composition in bael has been studied in India using fruit pulp, bark, and leaf tissues (Kaur and Kalia, 2017; Mishra et al, 2012; Sing et al., 2012). The accurate estimation of the elemental (macro and micronutrients) profiles in bael are very important in producing herbal drugs using fruit pulp and popularize as a medicinally valuable fruit species across all classes of the society, because, currently bael is mainly popular in rural areas and among older adults

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