Reduction of Azinphos-methyl, Chlorpyrifos, Esfenvalerate, and Methomyl Residues in Processed Apples
M. J. Zabik, M. F. A. El-Hadidi, J. N. CASH, M.E. Zabik, Alan L. Jones
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
McIntosh, Red Delicious, and Golden Delicious from two years of experimental spray programs using azinphos-methyl, chlorpyrifos, esfenvalerate, and methomyl were processed into frozen apple slices, applesauce, single-strength juice, and juice concentrate. Residue levels were expressed as micrograms per 150 g of apple or the equivalent amount of apple product to calculate the percentage change in these pesticides brought about by processing. Producing single-strength apple juice reduced azinphos-methyl, chlorpyrifos, esfenvalerate, and methomyl residues by 97.6, 100, 97.8, and 78.1%, respectively. Production of applesauce reduced all four compounds by >/=95%. Azinphos-methyl, chlorpyrifos, esfenvalerate, and methomyl residues were reduced in apple slices by 94.1, 85.7, 98.6, and 94.7%, respectively. Processing is shown to be very effective in reducing the levels of these pesticides.
Extracted Claims
12 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
esfenvalerate reduced residues
“Production of applesauce reduced all four compounds by >/=95%.”
chlorpyrifos reduced residues
“Production of applesauce reduced all four compounds by >/=95%.”
methomyl reduced residues
“Production of applesauce reduced all four compounds by >/=95%.”
azinphos-methyl