Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses

The objective of this research was to investigate the development of a reliable fingerprint from elemental and isotopic signatures of Argentinean honey to assess its geographical provenance. Honey, soil, and water from three regions (Córdoba, Buenos Aires, and Entre Rĺos) were collected. The multiel...

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Autores principales: Ostera, Héctor Adolfo, Cagnoni, Mariana Celina, Gautier, Eduardo Amilcar
Publicado: 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni
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spelling paper:paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni2023-06-08T14:42:18Z Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses Ostera, Héctor Adolfo Cagnoni, Mariana Celina Gautier, Eduardo Amilcar authenticity fingerprint geographical origin honey isotopic composition trace elements traceability Discriminant analysis Isotopes Mass spectrometers Mass spectrometry Soils Spectrometry Trace elements authenticity fingerprint Geographical origins honey Isotopic composition traceability Food products carbon soil trace element water analysis Argentina chemistry discriminant analysis evaluation study geography honey mass spectrometry procedures soil Argentina Carbon Isotopes Discriminant Analysis Geography Honey Mass Spectrometry Soil Trace Elements Water The objective of this research was to investigate the development of a reliable fingerprint from elemental and isotopic signatures of Argentinean honey to assess its geographical provenance. Honey, soil, and water from three regions (Córdoba, Buenos Aires, and Entre Rĺos) were collected. The multielemental composition was determined by ICP-MS. δ13C was measured by isotopic ratio mass spectrometry, whereas the 87Sr/86Sr ratio was determined using thermal ionization mass spectrometry. The data were analyzed by chemometrics looking for the association between the elements, stable isotopes, and honey samples from the three studied areas. Honey samples were differentiated by classification trees and discriminant analysis using a combination of eight key variables (Rb, K/Rb, B, U, 87Sr/86Sr, Na, La, and Zn) presenting differences among the studied regions. The application of canonical correlation analysis and generalized procrustes analysis showed 91.5% consensus between soil, water, and honey samples, in addition to clear differences between studied areas. To the authors knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the correspondence between soil, water, and honey samples using different statistical methods, showing that elemental and isotopic honey compositions are related to soil and water characteristics of the site of origin. © 2015 American Chemical Society. Fil:Ostera, H.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Cagnoni, M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Gautier, E.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. 2015 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic authenticity
fingerprint
geographical origin
honey
isotopic composition
trace elements
traceability
Discriminant analysis
Isotopes
Mass spectrometers
Mass spectrometry
Soils
Spectrometry
Trace elements
authenticity
fingerprint
Geographical origins
honey
Isotopic composition
traceability
Food products
carbon
soil
trace element
water
analysis
Argentina
chemistry
discriminant analysis
evaluation study
geography
honey
mass spectrometry
procedures
soil
Argentina
Carbon Isotopes
Discriminant Analysis
Geography
Honey
Mass Spectrometry
Soil
Trace Elements
Water
spellingShingle authenticity
fingerprint
geographical origin
honey
isotopic composition
trace elements
traceability
Discriminant analysis
Isotopes
Mass spectrometers
Mass spectrometry
Soils
Spectrometry
Trace elements
authenticity
fingerprint
Geographical origins
honey
Isotopic composition
traceability
Food products
carbon
soil
trace element
water
analysis
Argentina
chemistry
discriminant analysis
evaluation study
geography
honey
mass spectrometry
procedures
soil
Argentina
Carbon Isotopes
Discriminant Analysis
Geography
Honey
Mass Spectrometry
Soil
Trace Elements
Water
Ostera, Héctor Adolfo
Cagnoni, Mariana Celina
Gautier, Eduardo Amilcar
Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
topic_facet authenticity
fingerprint
geographical origin
honey
isotopic composition
trace elements
traceability
Discriminant analysis
Isotopes
Mass spectrometers
Mass spectrometry
Soils
Spectrometry
Trace elements
authenticity
fingerprint
Geographical origins
honey
Isotopic composition
traceability
Food products
carbon
soil
trace element
water
analysis
Argentina
chemistry
discriminant analysis
evaluation study
geography
honey
mass spectrometry
procedures
soil
Argentina
Carbon Isotopes
Discriminant Analysis
Geography
Honey
Mass Spectrometry
Soil
Trace Elements
Water
description The objective of this research was to investigate the development of a reliable fingerprint from elemental and isotopic signatures of Argentinean honey to assess its geographical provenance. Honey, soil, and water from three regions (Córdoba, Buenos Aires, and Entre Rĺos) were collected. The multielemental composition was determined by ICP-MS. δ13C was measured by isotopic ratio mass spectrometry, whereas the 87Sr/86Sr ratio was determined using thermal ionization mass spectrometry. The data were analyzed by chemometrics looking for the association between the elements, stable isotopes, and honey samples from the three studied areas. Honey samples were differentiated by classification trees and discriminant analysis using a combination of eight key variables (Rb, K/Rb, B, U, 87Sr/86Sr, Na, La, and Zn) presenting differences among the studied regions. The application of canonical correlation analysis and generalized procrustes analysis showed 91.5% consensus between soil, water, and honey samples, in addition to clear differences between studied areas. To the authors knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the correspondence between soil, water, and honey samples using different statistical methods, showing that elemental and isotopic honey compositions are related to soil and water characteristics of the site of origin. © 2015 American Chemical Society.
author Ostera, Héctor Adolfo
Cagnoni, Mariana Celina
Gautier, Eduardo Amilcar
author_facet Ostera, Héctor Adolfo
Cagnoni, Mariana Celina
Gautier, Eduardo Amilcar
author_sort Ostera, Héctor Adolfo
title Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
title_short Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
title_full Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
title_fullStr Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
title_full_unstemmed Linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of Argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
title_sort linking soil, water, and honey composition to assess the geographical origin of argentinean honey by multielemental and isotopic analyses
publishDate 2015
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218561_v63_n18_p4638_Baroni
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AT cagnonimarianacelina linkingsoilwaterandhoneycompositiontoassessthegeographicaloriginofargentineanhoneybymultielementalandisotopicanalyses
AT gautiereduardoamilcar linkingsoilwaterandhoneycompositiontoassessthegeographicaloriginofargentineanhoneybymultielementalandisotopicanalyses
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