School of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Science & Engineering, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia.
School of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Science & Engineering, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia; Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, 2600, Australia.
Environ Pollut. 2022 Oct 1;310:119798. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119798. Epub 2022 Jul 18.
Increased interest in backyard food production has drawn attention to the risks associated with urban trace element contamination, in particular lead (Pb) that was used in abundance in Pb-based paints and gasoline. Here we examine the sources, pathways and risks associated with environmental Pb in urban gardens, domestic chickens and their eggs. A suite of other trace element concentrations (including As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn) are reported from the sampled matrices. Sixty-nine domestic chickens from 55 Sydney urban gardens were sampled along with potential sources (feed, soil, water), blood Pb concentrations and corresponding concentrations in eggs. Age of the sampled chickens and house age was also collected. Commercial eggs (n = 9) from free range farms were analysed for comparative purposes. Study outcomes were modelled using the large Australian VegeSafe garden soil database (>20,000 samples) to predict which areas of inner-city Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane are likely to have soil Pb concentrations unsuitable for keeping backyard chickens. Soil Pb concentrations was a strong predictor of chicken blood and egg Pb (p=<0.00001). Almost 1 in 2 (n = 31/69) chickens had blood Pb levels >20 μg/dL, the level at which adverse effects may be observed. Older homes were correlated with higher chicken blood Pb (p = 0.00002) and egg Pb (p = 0.005), and younger chickens (<12 months old) had greater Pb concentrations, likely due to increased Pb uptake during early life development. Two key findings arose from the study data: (i) in order to retain chicken blood Pb below 20 μg/dL, soil Pb needs to be < 166 mg/kg; (ii) to retain egg Pb < 100 μg/kg (i.e. a food safety benchmark value), soil Pb needs to be < 117 mg/kg. These concentrations are significantly lower than the soil Pb guideline of 300 mg/kg for residential gardens. This research supports the conclusion that a large number of inner-city homes may not be suitable for keeping chickens and that further work regarding production and consumption of domestic food is warranted.
人们对后院食品生产的兴趣日益浓厚,这引起了人们对与城市微量元素污染相关的风险的关注,特别是在富含铅(Pb)的基于铅的油漆和汽油中大量使用的铅。在这里,我们研究了城市花园、家养鸡及其鸡蛋中与环境 Pb 相关的来源、途径和风险。还报告了从采样基质中获得的其他一些微量元素浓度(包括 As、Cd、Cr、Cu、Hg、Mn、Ni、Pb、Zn)。从 55 个悉尼城市花园中抽取了 69 只家养鸡以及潜在的来源(饲料、土壤、水)、血液 Pb 浓度以及相应的鸡蛋浓度。还收集了抽样鸡的年龄和房屋年龄。为了比较目的,分析了来自自由放养农场的商业鸡蛋(n=9)。使用大型澳大利亚 VegeSafe 花园土壤数据库(>20,000 个样本)对研究结果进行建模,以预测悉尼、墨尔本和布里斯班的哪些市中心地区的土壤 Pb 浓度不适合饲养后院鸡。土壤 Pb 浓度是鸡血液和鸡蛋 Pb 的强有力预测因素(p<0.00001)。几乎有 1/2(n=31/69)的鸡血液 Pb 水平超过 20μg/dL,这是可能观察到不良反应的水平。较老的房屋与较高的鸡血液 Pb 相关(p=0.00002)和鸡蛋 Pb 相关(p=0.005),较年轻的鸡(<12 个月大)具有更高的 Pb 浓度,这可能是由于在早期生命发育过程中增加了 Pb 吸收。研究数据得出了两个关键发现:(i)为了将鸡血液 Pb 保持在 20μg/dL 以下,土壤 Pb 需要<166mg/kg;(ii)为了将鸡蛋 Pb 保持在<100μg/kg(即食品安全基准值),土壤 Pb 需要<117mg/kg。这些浓度明显低于住宅花园中土壤 Pb 的 300mg/kg 指导值。这项研究支持这样的结论,即大量市中心房屋可能不适合饲养鸡,因此有必要进一步研究国内食品的生产和消费。