4.7 Article

Atmospheric transport of particulate matter and particulate-bound agrochemicals from beef cattle feedlots: Human health implications for downwind agricultural communities

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 894, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164678

Keywords

Confined animal feeding operations; PM; Pyrethroids; Human health assessment; Agroecosystems

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This study investigated the transport of particulate matter (PM) and co-occurring insecticides and anthelmintics downwind of three feedlots in the Southern Great Plains (SGP). The study found that PM concentrations rapidly declined with increasing distance downwind, but exceeded safe levels during certain periods. The frequent transport of pesticides downwind of feedlots led to residue accumulation in outdoor residential areas, posing potential risks of oral and dermal exposure to nearby communities.
Beef cattle feedlot particulate matter (PM) is a complex mixture of dust, animal waste, agrochemicals, and bioaerosols. However, no empirical data exist quantifying downwind residential exposure to PM or PM-bound agrochemicals. In the current study, authors investigated transport of PM and co-occurring insecticides and anthelmintics downwind of three feedlots in the Southern Great Plains (SGP) of North America from May-August 2022. PM collected on total suspended particulate (TSP) filters was analyzed via UHPLC-MS/MS for six pyrethroids and five macrocyclic lactones (MLs). Downwind TSP concentrations rapidly declined from 0.01 to <= 1.6 km (Monte Carlo mean +/- SEM; 5049 +/- 96.1 mu g/m(3)) and stabilized >1.6-12.4 km (1791 +/- 9.9; mu g/m(3)). Distance decay >1.6 km indicated downwind PM exceeded levels of safe human exposure during diurnal peak periods. Pyrethroids and MLs were detected >LOQ in 96.2 and 98.1% of downwind samples. Screening-level cumulative residential exposure indicates elevated pyrethroid risk (LOC = 1; RI = 0.173) to rural children (1-2 yrs) living near cropland operations in the SGP, with disproportionate co-exposure to feedlot PM and legacy pollution in low-income, Hispanic and Latino communities. Frequent occurrence and sustained transport of pyrethroids downwind of feedlots facilitate residue accumulation in outdoor residential areas that must also be quantified to assess the magnitude of daily average and lifetime-adjusted oral and dermal exposure in surrounding communities. Results significantly expand the known distribution of feedlot-derived PM and agrochemicals and highlight human exposure pathways unrecognized in residential human health assessments supporting pesticide registration and feedlot risk evaluation.

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