Collection of human and environmental data on pesticide use in Europe and Argentina: Field study protocol for the SPRINT project

Shepherd, Sebastian and Silva, Vera and Alaoui, Abdallah and Schlünssen, Vivi and Vested, Anne and Graumans, Martien and van Dael, Maurice and Trevisan, Marco and Suciu, Nicoleta and Mol, Hans and Beekmann, Karsten and Figueiredo, Daniel and Harkes, Paula and Hofman, Jakub and Kandeler, Ellen and Abrantes, Nelson and Campos, Isabel and Martínez, María Ángeles and Pereira, Joana Luísa and Goossens, Dirk and Gandrass, Juergen and Debler, Freya and Lwanga, Esperanza Huerta and Jonker, Marlot and van Langevelde, Frank and Sorensen, Martin T. and Wells, Jerry M. and Boekhorst, Jos and Huss, Anke and Mandrioli, Daniele and Sgargi, Daria and Nathanail, Paul and Nathanail, Judith and Tamm, Lucius and Fantke, Peter and Mark, Jennifer and Grovermann, Christian and Frelih-Larsen, Ana and Herb, Irina and Chivers, Charlotte-Anne and Mills, Jane and Alcon, Francisco and Contreras, Josefina and Baldi, Isabelle and Pasković, Igor and Matjaz, Glavan and Norgaard, Trine and Aparicio, Virginia and Ritsema, Coen J. and Geissen, Violette and Scheepers, Paul T. J. (2021) Collection of human and environmental data on pesticide use in Europe and Argentina: Field study protocol for the SPRINT project. PLOS ONE, 16 (11). e0259748. ISSN 1932-6203

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Abstract

Current farm systems rely on the use of Plant Protection Products (PPP) to secure high productivity and control threats to the quality of the crops. However, PPP use may have considerable impacts on human health and the environment. A study protocol is presented aiming to determine the occurrence and levels of PPP residues in plants (crops), animals (livestock), humans and other non-target species (ecosystem representatives) for exposure modelling and impact assessment. To achieve this, we designed a cross-sectional study to compare conventional and organic farm systems across Europe. Environmental and biological samples were/are being/will be collected during the 2021 growing season, at 10 case study sites in Europe covering a range of climate zones and crops. An additional study site in Argentina will inform the impact of PPP use on growing soybean which is an important European protein-source in animal feed. We will study the impact of PPP mixtures using an integrated risk assessment methodology. The fate of PPP in environmental media (soil, water and air) and in the homes of farmers will be monitored. This will be complemented by biomonitoring to estimate PPP uptake by humans and farm animals (cow, goat, sheep and chicken), and by collection of samples from non-target species (earthworms, fish, aquatic and terrestrial macroinvertebrates, bats, and farm cats). We will use data on PPP residues in environmental and biological matrices to estimate exposures by modelling. These exposure estimates together with health and toxicity data will be used to predict the impact of PPP use on environment, plant, animal and human health. The outcome of this study will then be integrated with socio-economic information leading to an overall assessment used to identify transition pathways towards more sustainable plant protection and inform decision makers, practitioners and other stakeholders regarding farming practices and land use policy.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Repository > Biological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 16 Nov 2022 03:59
Last Modified: 29 Mar 2024 04:14
URI: http://classical.goforpromo.com/id/eprint/1718

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