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Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation

Authorized Users Only
2021
Authors
Popović-Đorđević, Jelena
Kostić, Aleksandar Ž.
. Rajković, Miloš B.
Miljković, Irena
Krstić, Đurđa D.
Caruso, Gianluca
Siavash Moghaddam, Sina
Brčeski, Ilija
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Vegetables are important contributors to a healthy diet, and their adequate daily intake can help prevent some of the major illnesses. The aimof the study was to examine the content of the major and trace elements in selected organically grown (OG) and conventionally grown (CG) vegetables (cabbage, kohlrabi, Brussels sprout, beetroot, carrot, potato, and onion), taken from city green markets. Multi-elemental analysis was carried out by inductively coupled plasma method with optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES). Nutritional quality evaluation in comparison to nutritional reference values was done. In studied vegetables, Al, Ca, K, Fe (with the exception of organic kohlrabi), Mg, Na, P, S, and Zn were quantified in all samples, whereas As, Cd, Co, Hg, Se, and V were below the limit of detection for these elements. Macroelements and trace elements were found at higher concentrations in OG and CG vegetables, respectively. Differences in concentrations of studied elements between ...the same vegetable species produced in two agricultural systems were significant, except for beetroot (p ≤ 0.05). Principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis results showed that the botanical origin had higher influence on sample differentiation than the agronomic practice, which was in accordance with the results obtained by Mann-Whitney U test. Good quality of both OG and CG vegetables in respect of nutritionally beneficial elements was observed.

Keywords:
Vegetables / Major and trace elements / Nutritional quality / Principal component analysis
Source:
Biological Trace Element Research, 2021, 200, 426-436
Publisher:
  • Springer
Funding / projects:
  • Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200168 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Chemistry) (RS-200168)

DOI: 10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9

ISSN: 1559-0720; 0163-4984

WoS: 000623095900001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85101854300
[ Google Scholar ]
URI
http://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5078
Collections
  • Publikacije
Institution/Community
Hemijski fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Popović-Đorđević, Jelena
AU  - Kostić, Aleksandar Ž.
AU  - . Rajković, Miloš B.
AU  - Miljković, Irena
AU  - Krstić, Đurđa D.
AU  - Caruso, Gianluca
AU  - Siavash Moghaddam, Sina
AU  - Brčeski, Ilija
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5078
AB  - Vegetables are important contributors to a healthy diet, and their adequate daily intake can help prevent some of the major
illnesses. The aimof the study was to examine the content of the major and trace elements in selected organically grown (OG) and
conventionally grown (CG) vegetables (cabbage, kohlrabi, Brussels sprout, beetroot, carrot, potato, and onion), taken from city
green markets. Multi-elemental analysis was carried out by inductively coupled plasma method with optical emission spectrometry
(ICP-OES). Nutritional quality evaluation in comparison to nutritional reference values was done. In studied vegetables, Al,
Ca, K, Fe (with the exception of organic kohlrabi), Mg, Na, P, S, and Zn were quantified in all samples, whereas As, Cd, Co, Hg,
Se, and V were below the limit of detection for these elements. Macroelements and trace elements were found at higher
concentrations in OG and CG vegetables, respectively. Differences in concentrations of studied elements between the same
vegetable species produced in two agricultural systems were significant, except for beetroot (p ≤ 0.05). Principal component
analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis results showed that the botanical origin had higher influence on sample differentiation
than the agronomic practice, which was in accordance with the results obtained by Mann-Whitney U test. Good quality of both
OG and CG vegetables in respect of nutritionally beneficial elements was observed.
PB  - Springer
T2  - Biological Trace Element Research
T1  - Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation
VL  - 200
SP  - 426
EP  - 436
DO  - 10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Popović-Đorđević, Jelena and Kostić, Aleksandar Ž. and . Rajković, Miloš B. and Miljković, Irena and Krstić, Đurđa D. and Caruso, Gianluca and Siavash Moghaddam, Sina and Brčeski, Ilija",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Vegetables are important contributors to a healthy diet, and their adequate daily intake can help prevent some of the major
illnesses. The aimof the study was to examine the content of the major and trace elements in selected organically grown (OG) and
conventionally grown (CG) vegetables (cabbage, kohlrabi, Brussels sprout, beetroot, carrot, potato, and onion), taken from city
green markets. Multi-elemental analysis was carried out by inductively coupled plasma method with optical emission spectrometry
(ICP-OES). Nutritional quality evaluation in comparison to nutritional reference values was done. In studied vegetables, Al,
Ca, K, Fe (with the exception of organic kohlrabi), Mg, Na, P, S, and Zn were quantified in all samples, whereas As, Cd, Co, Hg,
Se, and V were below the limit of detection for these elements. Macroelements and trace elements were found at higher
concentrations in OG and CG vegetables, respectively. Differences in concentrations of studied elements between the same
vegetable species produced in two agricultural systems were significant, except for beetroot (p ≤ 0.05). Principal component
analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis results showed that the botanical origin had higher influence on sample differentiation
than the agronomic practice, which was in accordance with the results obtained by Mann-Whitney U test. Good quality of both
OG and CG vegetables in respect of nutritionally beneficial elements was observed.",
publisher = "Springer",
journal = "Biological Trace Element Research",
title = "Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation",
volume = "200",
pages = "426-436",
doi = "10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9"
}
Popović-Đorđević, J., Kostić, A. Ž., . Rajković, M. B., Miljković, I., Krstić, Đ. D., Caruso, G., Siavash Moghaddam, S.,& Brčeski, I.. (2021). Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation. in Biological Trace Element Research
Springer., 200, 426-436.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9
Popović-Đorđević J, Kostić AŽ, . Rajković MB, Miljković I, Krstić ĐD, Caruso G, Siavash Moghaddam S, Brčeski I. Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation. in Biological Trace Element Research. 2021;200:426-436.
doi:10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9 .
Popović-Đorđević, Jelena, Kostić, Aleksandar Ž., . Rajković, Miloš B., Miljković, Irena, Krstić, Đurđa D., Caruso, Gianluca, Siavash Moghaddam, Sina, Brčeski, Ilija, "Organically vs. Conventionally Grown Vegetables: Multi-elemental Analysis and Nutritional Evaluation" in Biological Trace Element Research, 200 (2021):426-436,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12011-021-02639-9 . .

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