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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Analysis of organophosphorus pesticides in honeybee by liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry.

Yolanda PicóJordi MañesM. FernándezStefano Girotti

subject

Detection limitChemical ionizationInsecticidesChromatographyExtraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryPesticide ResiduesAtmospheric-pressure chemical ionizationGeneral ChemistryPesticideBeesMass spectrometrySensitivity and SpecificityMass Spectrometrychemistry.chemical_compoundParathionOrganophosphorus CompoundschemistryAnimalsSelected ion monitoringGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesChromatography Liquid

description

Pesticides applied in extended agricultural fields may be controlled by means of bioindicators, such as honeybees, in which are the pesticides bioaccumulate. Liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS) experiments with positive (PI) and negative (NI) ion modes were optimized for the analysis of 22 organophosphorus pesticides in honeybee samples. The extraction required 3 g of sample, which was extracted with acetone. The extract was purified with coagulating solution and reextracted with Cl(2)CH(2). Pesticides studied could be detected by both ionization modes except for parathion, parathion-methyl, and bromophos, which did not give signals in PI mode, and triazophos, which was not detected in NI mode. Fragmentation voltage and vaporizer temperature were optimized to achieve the highest sensitivity. The spectra profile of each pesticide in PI mode showed the [M + H](+) ion as the main signal, whereas in NI mode only fragment ions were shown. The detection limit obtained in selected ion monitoring mode ranged from 1 to 15 microg kg(-1). The average recoveries from spiked honeybees at various concentration levels (0.5-5 mg kg(-1)) exceeded 65% with relative standard deviations of 4-15%. The method was applied to real samples, in which residues of coumaphos and dimethoate were detected.

10.1021/jf010238mhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11513625