4.6 Article

Particulate Matter Contamination of Bee Pollen in an Industrial Area of the Po Valley (Italy)

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app112311390

Keywords

bee pollen; particulate matter; pollen contamination; industrial pollution; vehicular traffic; SEM; EDX

Funding

  1. Project from Seed to Spoon S2S [2019-1-IT02-KA20106239]

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Global demand for bee pollen as a dietary supplement is rising, but contamination from environmental pollutants is a concern. Current data on bee pollen contamination mainly focus on pesticides and heavy metals, with little research on potential pollution from airborne particulate matter.
The global demand for bee pollen as a dietary supplement for human nutrition is increasing. Pollen, which comprises proteins and lipids from bees' diets, is rich in essential amino acids, omega fatty acids, and bioactive compounds that can have beneficial effects on human health. However, bee pollen may also contain contaminants due to environmental contamination. To date, data on bee pollen contamination by environmental pollutants refer almost exclusively to pesticides and heavy metals, and very little information is available on the potential contamination of bee pollen by airborne particulate matter (PM), a ubiquitous pollutant that originates from a wide range of anthropogenic sources (e.g., motor vehicles, industrial processes, agricultural operations). In the present study, pollen grains collected by forager bees living in an industrial area of the Po Valley (Northern Italy) were analyzed for contamination by inorganic PM. The morpho-chemical characterization of inorganic particles using SEM/EDX allowed us to identify different emission sources and demonstrate the potential risk of PM entering the food chain and exposing bees to its ingestion.

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