Abstract

The Owena River Basin in Nigeria is an area of agricultural importance for the production of cocoa. To optimise crop yield, the cocoa trees require spraying with neonicotinoid insecticides (Imidacloprid, Thiacloprid Acetamiprid and Thiamethoxam). It is proposed that rainwater runoff from the treated area may pollute the Owena River and that these pesticides may thereby enter the human food chain via six species of fish (Clariasgariepinus, Clariasanguillaris, Sarotherodongalilaeus, Parachannaobscura, Oreochromisniloticus and Gymnarchusniloticus) which are cultured in the river mostly for local consumption. This work aims to establish a working method to quantify the likely levels of the insecticides in the six species of fish, firstly by undertaking a laboratory-based study employing the QuEChERS method to extract the four neonicotinoids from fish purchased in marketplace in the UK, spiked with known quantities of the pesticide and using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS) as the detection method; secondly, by using these samples to optimise the detection method for very low levels of pesticides, then applying the optimised techniques to the analysis of three of each six species of fish taken from the Owena River. A significant benefit of this combined technique is that only small samples of fish are required. Success with this part of the study showed that very low concentrations of the insecticides could be detected in fish muscle. The third aim is to apply a simple quantitative risk assessment model using the data sets obtained, together with information about daily diet, human body weight and recommended safety limits of pesticides in food to illustrate how human health may be affected by the consumption of these fish. The multiple determinations of neonicotinoids in edible fishes in Nigeria are pioneer research and fill a gap in addressing the relationship between waterborne pesticides and food quality in the country. Fundamentally, this work is an exercise to demonstrate the applicability of the aforementioned instrumental method of analysis to fish muscle, which requires only a small sample size of fish; a large number of fish is not required for a proof of concept, in this case. Although not a monitoring programme for the whole Owena River Basin ecosystem per se, this work successfully demonstrates the technical feasibility of a system of chemical analysis and establishes the foundation for ecological surveys in the immediate future. Parameters involving exposures to xenobiotics in ecotoxicological modelling can now be expressed in terms of both mass and molar concentrations of a chemical in animal tissues if so desired.

Highlights

  • ContaminantsNeonicotinoid InsecticidesInsecticides as as Potential Potential Water Water PollutantsPollutants and and FoodFood ContaminantsThe cocoatrade tradeisisimportant important national economy of Nigeria

  • If the rate of injection of neonics into a river system is mainly due to runoff, the “sink” terms will be the rates of photolysis, bacterial degradation and oxidation by cytochrome P450 enzymes in organisms

  • Efforts to optimise the performance of the combination of extraction of neonics by the QuEChERS

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Summary

Neonicotinoid

The cocoa to to thethe national economy of Nigeria. River runs along the major cocoa-producing second most important cash crop [1,2]. Nigeria where neonicotinoid insecticides are sprayed sprayed onto Theobroma cacao L.trees). (cocoa control pests such asamirids, a major problem facing onto Theobroma cacao L. (cocoa to trees) controltopests such as mirids, major problem facing farmers. OfThe airborne pesticides into rural and urban populations has become a public health issue recently [4,5,6]. Into rural and urban populations has become a public health issue recently [4,5,6]. The fallout from airborne pesticides contribute to [8].[8]. The fallout from airborne pesticides cancan alsoalso contribute to this this pollution.

Pathways
Aims
Insecticidal Properties
Water Solubilities
Photolysis
The Study Area
Clarification of Two Technical Terms in Literature
Collection and Storage of Spiked and Unspiked Fish Samples
Extraction of Neonics from Fish Samples
Operational
Biological Data on Fish Collected from the Owena River
Estimation of Age
Condition Factor
Examples of Conditions of Fingerlings in Aquaculture
Vulnerability of Juvenile and Young Fish
Determination of Neonics in Fish Muscle
Ecotoxicological Models
Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and Chemical Species Specificity
Preparative Work for Pilot-Scale Study
Diet and Habitat
Methodology
Calculation and Results
Gaps in Knowledge
Toxicity of Pesticides in Perspective
Further Work
Conclusions
Full Text
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