Pedosphere 22(4): 562--571, 2012
ISSN 1002-0160/CN 32-1315/P
©2012 Soil Science Society of China
Published by Elsevier B.V. and Science Press
Contamination of harvested organs in root crops grown on chlordecone-polluted soils
Y. M. CABIDOCHE1 and M. LESUEUR-JANNOYER2,3
1 Research Unit 1321 Agrosystèmes Tropicaux, INRA, Duclos, 97170 Petit-Bourg (France);
2 Pôle de Recherche Agro-Environnementale de Martinique, CIRAD, Petit-Morne, BP 214, 97285 Lamentin (France);
3 UR103 Fonctionnement Agroécologique et Performances des Systèmes de Culture Horticoles, CIRAD, TA B-103/PS4, Bd de la Lironde, 34389 Montpellier Cedex 5 (France)
ABSTRACT
      Chlordecone, one of the most persistent organochlorine pesticides, was applied between 1972 and 1993 in banana fields in the French West Indies, which results in long-term pollution of soils and contamination of waters, aquatic biota, and crops. As human exposure to chlordecone is mainly due to food contamination, early research was focused on chlordecone transfer to crops. Field trials were conducted to investigate chlordecone contamination of yam, sweet potato, turnip, and radish grown on a Ferralic Nitisol polluted by chlordecone. We also carried out trials on yam, courgette, and tomato under greenhouse conditions with homogenized Andosol and Nitisol, polluted by chlordecone to various extents. Our results indicated that i) all tubers were contaminated in accordance with the chlordecone content of the soils; ii) the plant contamination capacity of the Nitisol was greater than that of the Andosol; and iii) whatever the soil type, tuber contamination was related to the soil volumetric content of dissolved chlordecone. Nevertheless, no tubers showed sufficient chlordecone uptake for efficient soil decontamination by means of plant extraction. Soil contact accounted for most of the root crop contamination, which was inversely proportional to the tuber size. Internal transfer might also increase root crop contamination when the root central cylinder contained raw sap flow, as in the case of turnip or radish. Courgette fruits showed high contamination without soil contact. Thus, further research is needed to explore the pattern of both below- and aboveground plant chlordecone contamination and assess the hypothesis of its correlation with sap flow. Finally, we used our results to build a decisionmaking tool for farmers, relating soil pollution with the maximal contamination of the harvested organs to predict crop contamination and thus assisting farmers in making crop choices at planting in order to conform with the European Union's regulations.
Key Words:  crop contamination, fruit, organochlorine pesticide, soil pollution, tuber
Citation: Cabidoche, Y. M. and Lesueur-jannoyer, M. 2012. Contamination of harvested organs in root crops grown on chlordecone-polluted soils. Pedosphere. 22(4): 562-571.
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