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Articles

Agricultural pesticide residues in water from a karstic aquifer in Yucatan, Mexico, pose a risk to children’s health

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Pages 2218-2232 | Received 15 Dec 2020, Accepted 27 Jun 2021, Published online: 20 Jul 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Yucatan is a region with a high impact of water contamination since it has a karst type soil favoring contaminants entry into the phreatic level, the only source of freshwater in the area. However, no studies report pesticides in water for human consumption or the risk it represents. The objective of this study was to detect and measure pesticide concentrations in domestic tap water to estimate the risk (carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic) to health. A non-probabilistic sampling was applied of 48 tap water sources, and then pesticide detection with solid-phase extraction gas chromatography coupled to the electron capture and flame photometric detectors allowed the estimation of risk through hazard ratios. The present results suggest that aldrin, heptachlor, and β-BHC residues in domestic tap water from Ticul, Yucatan, pose a risk to children’s health, particularly for potential carcinogenic risks.

Acknowledgments

We thank the National laboratory for Food Safety Research at CIAD Culiacán for the facilities provided for the development of experimental work. This work was supported by National Council of Science and Technology to the Thematic Network on Toxicology of Pesticides (grants numbers 262284/280045/294303) and Thematic Network on Children’s Environmental Health (grant number 293450).

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflicting interests that could influence the study’s realization, results, and conclusions. All the authors were actively involved in the development of the study.

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