Contamination of tea leaves by anthraquinone: The atmosphere as a possible source
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Discipline
Earth and related Environmental sciences
Subject
Air pollution
Anthraquinone
Atmospheric transport
Food contamination
Pesticide residue limits
Tea
Audience
Scientific
Date
2023Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
The detection of anthraquinone in tea leaves has raised concerns due to a potential health risk associated with this species. This led the European Union to impose a maximum residue limit (MRL) of 0.02 mg/kg for anthraquinone in dried tea leaves. As atmospheric contamination has been identified as one of the possible sources of anthraquinone residue, this study investigates the contamination resulting from the deposition of atmospheric anthraquinone using a global chemical transport model that accounts for the emission, atmospheric transport, chemical transformation, and deposition of anthraquinone on the surface. The largest contribution to the global atmospheric budget of anthraquinone is from residential combustion followed by the secondary formation from oxidation of anthracene. Simulations suggest that atmospheric anthraquinone deposition could be a substantial source of the anthraquinone found on tea leaves in several tea-producing regions, especially near highly industrialized and populated areas of southern and eastern Asia. The high level of anthraquinone deposition in these areas may result in residues in tea products exceeding the EU MRL. Additional contamination could also result from local tea production operations.
Citation
Li, C.W.Y.; Walters, S.; Müller, J.-F.; Orlando, J.; Brasseur, G.P. (2023). Contamination of tea leaves by anthraquinone: The atmosphere as a possible source. , Ambio, Vol. 52, Issue 8, 1373-1388, DOI: 10.1007/s13280-023-01858-9.Identifiers
scopus:
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng