Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea

Objective: To understand the safety of applying difenoconazole to jasmine, the transfer behavior of difenoconazole from jasmine gardens to tea infusion and the risk of difenoconazole exposure through dietary intake of jasmine scented tea were studied. Methods: Field trials were conducted in accordan...

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Main Author: SUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: China Food Publishing Company 2025-04-01
Series:Shipin Kexue
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Online Access:https://www.spkx.net.cn/fileup/1002-6630/PDF/2025-46-7-033.pdf
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author SUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li
author_facet SUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li
author_sort SUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li
collection DOAJ
description Objective: To understand the safety of applying difenoconazole to jasmine, the transfer behavior of difenoconazole from jasmine gardens to tea infusion and the risk of difenoconazole exposure through dietary intake of jasmine scented tea were studied. Methods: Field trials were conducted in accordance with the Guideline for the testing of pesticide residues in crops, and gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC-MS/MS) was used to determine the residue levels of difenoconazole in samples from the planting, scenting, and brewing processes. Results: The dissipation process of difenoconazole in jasmine flowers followed a first-order kinetic equation, with a half-life of 1.4 days and a dissipation rate of 87% after 5 days. The transfer rate of difenoconazole from jasmine flowers to tea in the scenting process was 5.4%. Difenoconazole was not detected in tea infusion. Combining the above experimental results with the consumption of jasmine scented tea, the chronic and acute risks of difenoconazole exposure via jasmine scented tea infusion were 0.067% and 0.004 6%, respectively. Conclusion: Difenoconazole is safe for application in jasmine gardens. The health risk of difenoconazole via dietary intake of tea scented with jasmine 1–3 days after being treated with a 1 000-fold dilution of 10% aqueous dispersion of difenoconazole is acceptable
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id doaj-art-de25b66c892b4f358efaba7671210c21
institution OA Journals
issn 1002-6630
language English
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher China Food Publishing Company
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series Shipin Kexue
spelling doaj-art-de25b66c892b4f358efaba7671210c212025-08-20T02:12:19ZengChina Food Publishing CompanyShipin Kexue1002-66302025-04-0146730330810.7506/spkx1002-6630-20240913-099Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented TeaSUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li0(1. Tea Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou 310008, China; 2. College of Plant Protection, Jilin Agricultural University, Changchun 130118, China; 3. Hengzhou Jamine Industry Service Center, Hengzhou 530300, China)Objective: To understand the safety of applying difenoconazole to jasmine, the transfer behavior of difenoconazole from jasmine gardens to tea infusion and the risk of difenoconazole exposure through dietary intake of jasmine scented tea were studied. Methods: Field trials were conducted in accordance with the Guideline for the testing of pesticide residues in crops, and gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC-MS/MS) was used to determine the residue levels of difenoconazole in samples from the planting, scenting, and brewing processes. Results: The dissipation process of difenoconazole in jasmine flowers followed a first-order kinetic equation, with a half-life of 1.4 days and a dissipation rate of 87% after 5 days. The transfer rate of difenoconazole from jasmine flowers to tea in the scenting process was 5.4%. Difenoconazole was not detected in tea infusion. Combining the above experimental results with the consumption of jasmine scented tea, the chronic and acute risks of difenoconazole exposure via jasmine scented tea infusion were 0.067% and 0.004 6%, respectively. Conclusion: Difenoconazole is safe for application in jasmine gardens. The health risk of difenoconazole via dietary intake of tea scented with jasmine 1–3 days after being treated with a 1 000-fold dilution of 10% aqueous dispersion of difenoconazole is acceptablehttps://www.spkx.net.cn/fileup/1002-6630/PDF/2025-46-7-033.pdfjasmine flower; scenting; residue; dissipation; transfer; brewing
spellingShingle SUN Hezhi, DAI Zhongyang, MA Jinsen, WANG Xinru, LUO Zongxiu, XIU Chunli, ZHOU Li
Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
Shipin Kexue
jasmine flower; scenting; residue; dissipation; transfer; brewing
title Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
title_full Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
title_fullStr Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
title_full_unstemmed Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
title_short Transfer Behavior of and Dietary Exposure Risk to Difenoconazole in Jasmine Scented Tea
title_sort transfer behavior of and dietary exposure risk to difenoconazole in jasmine scented tea
topic jasmine flower; scenting; residue; dissipation; transfer; brewing
url https://www.spkx.net.cn/fileup/1002-6630/PDF/2025-46-7-033.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sunhezhidaizhongyangmajinsenwangxinruluozongxiuxiuchunlizhouli transferbehaviorofanddietaryexposurerisktodifenoconazoleinjasminescentedtea