Article
Matrix solid-phase dispersion associated to gas chromatography forthe assessment in honey bee of a group of pesticides of concern in theapicultural field
Fecha
2018Registro en:
Balsebre A, Báez ME, Martínez J, Fuentes E. Matrix solid-phase dispersion associated to gas chromatography for the assessment in honey bee of a group of pesticides of concern in the apicultural field. J Chromatogr A. 2018 Sep 14;1567:47-54. doi: 10.1016/j.chroma.2018.06.062
Autor
Balsebre, Arantza
Báeza, María
Martínez, Jessica
Fuentesa, Edwar
Institución
Resumen
A method based on matrix solid-phase dispersion (MSPD) associated to gas chromatography-flame photometric detection (GC-FPD), GC-electron capture detection (GC-ECD) and GC-mass spectrometry (GC–MS) for confirmation purposes, was developed for the determination of a representative group of twelve pesticides in honeybee with particular concern in the apicultural field (fipronil, thiamethoxam, acetamiprid, acrinathrin, metamidophos, dimetoathe, diazinon, chlorpyrifos, methidathion, profenophos, azinphos methyl and coumaphos). Factors influencing the extraction efficiency of MSPD were investigated and optimized through response surface method. The use of octadecylsilyl (C18) sorbent combined with a florisil clean-up and acetonitrile-methanol (99:1) elution was the optimal condition for the extraction of the selected pesticides. Under this condition the recovery of pesticides at the limit of quantification of the method (0.007 to 0.050 μg g−1) ranged from 68 to 102% with RSDs for within-laboratory reproducibility ≤20%. The proposed method was applied to the analysis of honeybees collected in 68 field hives from areas of great apicultural and agricultural development in central Chile. In 65% of these samples eight different pesticides were detected. Pesticides most frequently found were chlorpyrifos (34% of the samples, <0.017–0.067 μg g−1), acrinathrin (32% of the samples, <0.020–0.026 μg g−1) and diazinon (10% of the samples at values <0.015 μg g−1). The incidence of these pesticides in bees can be related to their high employ in central Chile, use to combat the varroosis in hives and hydrophobicity.