Abstract

Over 200 samples of cow's milk have been analysed for dioxins in a survey on the occurrence of dioxins in milk from the vicinity of municipal waste incinerators (MSWs) and other potential dioxin sources in The Netherlands. Levels in milk were found to vary considerably with time, depending on emission rates, the direction and distance to the source and the feeding and housing of cows. Highest levels of up to 13.5 pg TEQ/g of milk fat were found in the Lickebaert area and Zaandam near two incinerators with highest emission rates. The background level ranged between 0.7 and 2.5 pg TEQ/g of milk fat. Levels in winter were comparable to those found in summer and, in some areas, even higher, when cows were fed with hay and silage harvested on the same farm. After the closure of the MSW in Zaandam, cow's milk from neighbouring farms showed a significant decrease in dioxin levels to below the critical limit of 6 pg TEQ/g of milk fat. Dioxin levels in the vicinity of a metal reclamation plant were comparable to those in milk from the vicinity of a MSW with moderate emissions. Differences were observed in the ratio PCDF/PCDD, which was higher in milk near the metal reclamation plant. Principal component analysis has been applied on a large data set of patterns of the 2,3,7,8-chlorine substituted PCDDs and PCDFs in cow's milk. This technique has proved to be useful for distinguishing and identification of sources on the basis of the isomer pattern in milk.

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