Toxic Elements and Bio-metals in Cantharellus Mushrooms from Poland and China
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 2017-03-18
- View Source
Summary
Background
Wild-growing mushrooms are valued ingredients of food or special dishes in many cultures worldwide. Documented data indicates intake can exceed 20 kg fresh product per capita annually in some regions like Yunnan province, China. While mushrooms are important organic food items, knowledge gaps exist regarding their mineral constituent composition, fate during culinary processing, and accessibility.
Objective
This study aimed to update information on essential and hazardous metallic elements accumulated in Cantharellus mushrooms foraged in Poland and China as determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy with a dynamic reaction cell (ICP-DRC-MS). The research sought to explain results based on baseline content of geogenic metallic elements and metalloids in soils from background areas in Yunnan as well as geogenic and anthropogenic sources in Poland.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Environmental Science and Pollution Research International,
- Study Type:Analytical Research Study,
- Source: 10.1007/s11356-017-8554-z