خيارات البحث
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Impact of food consumption on water footprint and food security in Tunisia النص الكامل
2019
Souissi, Asma | Mtimet, Nadhem | Thabet, Chokri | Stambouli, Talel | Chebil, Ali
Over the next few years, Tunisia will face a growing scarcity of water. The concept of a food consumption water footprint has been recently applied to expand knowledge about water management and to respond to problems of food insecurity. In this study, following the Water Footprint Network (WFN) method, we assessed and analysed the food consumption water footprint of Tunisian households by geographical location and by group of food products. We used results from national food surveys to collect the quantities of food consumed and the WFN database containing water footprints of food products specific to Tunisia. We found that the average water footprint for the main consumed food groups has increased by 31% during recent decades, from 1208 m³/capita/year in 1985 to 1586 m³/capita/year in 2010. Despite the decline in cereal consumption in Tunisia, the food water footprint has continued to rise as a result of increased consumption of animal source products. This increase is associated with regional variations in food choices that imply large differences in water footprints. Urban diets present higher water footprints than rural diets proportionally to higher standards of living. This study provides a new perspective on the water footprint of food consumption in Tunisia by using dietary data at the household level and demonstrated significant variability in water footprints due to different food consumption modes, and socio-economic and geographic characteristics. Future food consumption trends will likely create more pressure on water resources, especially in Tunis city and coastal areas of Tunisia. Special measures related to price policies, sensitization of consumers, and changes in production systems may have to be taken by policy makers to reduce the water footprint in order to improve food security strategies and water management in Tunisia.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Fluoroquinolone pollution of food, water and soil, and bacterial resistance النص الكامل
2015
Rusu, Aura | Hancu, Gabriel | Uivaroşi, Valentina
Fluoroquinolones are a valuable synthetic antibacterial class widely used in the treatment of infectious diseases both in humans and animals. Until recently, it has been thought that bacterial resistance to fluoroquinolones develops very slowly. Nowadays, there are multiple studies that reveal the alarming occurrence of bacterial resistance and there is a high risk of becoming therapeutically useless. The emergence of this phenomenon comes from injudicious usage in therapy, the presence of residues and their metabolites in food of animal origin and also in sewage, compost and domestic waste, which end up in soil and water sources. In the present paper, we reviewed important issues regarding fluoroquinolones impact on the environment in connection with the development of bacterial resistance: (1) the presence of fluoroquinolones as pollutants in soil, surface waters, and food. Fluoroquinolones are persistent with high specificity to interact with soil compared to other antibiotics. Pollution of water sources raises concerns regarding the effects of small concentrations (ng L⁻¹) on human health and also of the environment. The non-therapeutic use in animal farms conducts to food pollution; the cultivated plants could concentrate the fluoroquinolones (over 100 μg L⁻¹); (2) the increase of bacterial resistance to fluoroquinolones occurring with specific mutations in the target enzymes as well by the plasmid-mediated resistance and active efflux of the cell; (3) international regulations of the fluoroquinolone residues in food that are far to encompass all compounds; (4) fluoroquinolones residues analysis with standardized methods should provide limits of detection lower than maximum residue limit values; and (5) trends and perspectives: (a) a wider process of harmonization of regulations; (b) the fluoroquinolones restriction, necessary for low levels of bacterial resistance; (c) the soil and waste water purification methods; (d) the practice of soil planting scheme as an alternative; and (e) an environmental label in order to facilitate the selection of drugs.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Magnetic solid-phase extraction of sulfonamide antibiotics in water and animal-derived food samples using core-shell magnetite and molybdenum disulfide nanocomposite adsorbent النص الكامل
2020
Zhao, Yanfang | Wu, Ri | Yu, Hao | Li, Jingkun | Liu, Lanqi | Wang, Shanshan | Chen, Xiangfeng | Chan, T.-W Dominic
A molybdenum disulfide(MoS2)-based core-shell magnetic nanocomposite (Fe₃O₄@MoS₂) was synthesized by the stepwise hydrothermal method. Two-dimension ultrathin MoS₂ sheets with a thickness of approximately 20 nm were grown in situ on the surface of Fe₃O₄ (∼200 nm). They were employed as an adsorbent for the magnetic solid-phase extraction (MSPE) of sulfonamide antibiotics (SAs) from water samples. High-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) was used for SA quantitation. Extraction parameters, including the pH effect, amount of Fe₃O₄@MoS₂, extraction time, temperature, and desorption conditions, were systematically investigated. The electrostatic interaction between the positively charged SAs and negatively charged MoS₂ nanoparticles in the optimal extraction conditions enhanced the adsorption of SAs on the sorbent surface. Under chosen conditions, the proposed strategy achieved wide linear range of 1.0–1000 ng·L⁻¹ SAs, low limits of detection (LOD, 0.20–1.15 ng·L⁻¹, S/N = 3:1), good trueness (recoveries between 85.50–111.5%), satisfactory repeatability and reproducibility (relative standard deviation, <10%, n = 5), and excellent recoveries between 80.20% and 108.6% for SAs determination in spiked waste water samples. The proposed strategy was validated and successfully applied for the analysis of water, milk, pork meat and fish meat. The nanocomposites, which have the combined advantages of magnetic separation and high adsorption affinity toward SAs, are a promising sorbent for antibiotics extraction from real samples.
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