Abstract

France is the first pesticide-consuming country in Europe. Glyphosate is the most used pesticide worldwide and glyphosate is detected in the general population of industrialized countries, with higher levels found in farmers and children. Little data was available concerning exposure in France. Our objective was to determine glyphosate levels in the French general population and to search for an association with seasons, biological features, lifestyle status, dietary habits, and occupational exposure. This study includes 6848 participants recruited between 2018 and 2020. Associated data include age, gender, location, employment status, and dietary information. Glyphosate was quantified by a single laboratory in first-void urine samples using ELISA. Our results support a general contamination of the French population, with glyphosate quantifiable in 99.8% of urine samples with a mean of 1.19 ng/ml + / − 0.84 after adjustment to body mass index (BMI). We confirm higher glyphosate levels in men and children. Our results support glyphosate contamination through food and water intake, as lower glyphosate levels are associated with dominant organic food intake and filtered water. Higher occupational exposure is confirmed in farmers and farmers working in wine-growing environment. Thus, our present results show a general contamination of the French population with glyphosate, and further contribute to the description of a widespread contamination in industrialized countries.

Highlights

  • Following World War II, the French agricultural model evolved through mechanization, crop improvement, and increased use of chemicals

  • Concerning dietary habits, over half of the participants self-reported that their usual diet included at least 60% of organic food

  • A higher proportion of participants reported working in a countryside environment than in an urban environment; of note, 7.5% of the participants worked in a winegrowing environment

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Summary

Introduction

Following World War II, the French agricultural model evolved through mechanization, crop improvement, and increased use of chemicals (plant protection products and fertilizers). In the last 40 years, the number of French farmers decreased from 1.61 million in 1982 to 0.4 million in 2019. 1.1 million farms were recorded in 1988 vs 0.45 million in 2013. 29 million hectares (ha) are dedicated to agriculture (54% of the French surface area), with an average of 61 ha per farm. Farm sizes vary greatly according to crop production: 87 ha per farm for cereal production down to 10 ha for horticulture or market gardening (Agreste 2020b, d, e, INSEE 2020)

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