Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4430387 | Science of The Total Environment | 2011 | 9 Pages |
A chain model was developed to calculate the flow of cadmium from soil, drinking water and feed towards bovine tissues. The data used for model development were tissue Cd concentrations of 57 bovines and Cd concentrations in soil, feed and drinking water, sampled at the farms were the bovines were reared. Validation of the model occurred with a second set of measured tissue Cd concentrations of 93 bovines of which age and farm location were known. The exposure part of the chain model consists of two parts: (1) a soil–plant transfer model, deriving cadmium concentrations in feed from basic soil characteristics (pH and organic matter content) and soil Cd concentrations, and (2) bovine intake calculations, based on typical feed and water consumption patterns for cattle and Cd concentrations in feed and drinking water. The output of the exposure model is an animal-specific average daily Cd intake, which is then taken forward to a kinetic uptake model in which time-dependent Cd concentrations in bovine tissues are calculated. The chain model was able to account for 65%, 42% and 32% of the variation in observed kidney, liver and meat Cd concentrations in the validation study.
Research highlights► Cadmium transfer from soil, drinking water and feed to bovine tissues was modeled. ► The model was based on 57 bovines and corresponding feed and soil Cd concentrations. ► The model was validated with an independent data set of 93 bovines. ► The model explained 65% of variation in kidney Cd in the validation study.