Arsenic concentrations and speciation in Australian and imported rice and commercial rice products

William Maher*, Elliott Duncan, Hayden Martin, Peter Snell, Frank Krikowa, Rajani Jagtap, Simon Foster, Tariq Ezaz, Michael J. Ellwood

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    11 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Environmental context In countries where inhabitants are not exposed to arsenic-contaminated drinking water, food is the major source of potentially toxic inorganic arsenic. To complement the existing worldwide dataset on arsenic in rice, data are presented on Australian- and overseas-grown rice, and assessed in terms of possible risk. Only a diet comprising multiple serves of some rice products per day poses a potential risk to young children. Abstract Arsenic concentrations and speciation measurements were determined for six varieties of Australian-grown rice (n = 130), imported rice (n = 53) and rice products (n = 56) from supermarkets. Total As, inorganic As and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) concentrations in Australian rice ranged from 16 to 630 μg As kg -1 (mean ± s.d.: 220 ± 122 μg kg -1), 16 to 250 μg As kg -1 (92 ± 52 μg As kg -1) and <5 to 432 μg As kg -1 (125 ± 109 μg As kg -1), respectively. Total As, inorganic As and DMA concentrations in imported rice ranged between 31 and 376 μg As kg -1 (130 ± 98 μg kg -1), 17 and 198 μg As kg -1 (73 ± 40 μg As kg -1) and <5 and 327 μg As kg -1 (84 ± 92 μg As kg -1) respectively. Few samples exceeded the guidelines for inorganic As in polished rice. In rice products, total As, inorganic As and DMA concentrations ranged between 21 and 480 μg As kg -1 (160 ± 110 μg As kg -1), 20 and 255 μg As kg -1 (92 ± 78 μg As kg -1) and <5 and 340 μg As kg -1 (65 ± 69 μg As kg -1) respectively. Sixteen samples exceeded the 100 μg kg -1 maximum for inorganic As concentration in rice foods for infants and young children. Ingestion of multiple serves of some rice products poses a potential risk. Environmental chemistry gaps, on processes influencing As occurrence in rice, are discussed.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)387-402
    Number of pages16
    JournalEnvironmental Chemistry
    Volume15
    Issue number7
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

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