Silvina Niell
University of the Republic
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Silvina Niell.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2011
Lucía Pareja; Marcos Colazzo; Andrés Pérez-Parada; Silvina Niell; Leonidas Carrasco-Letelier; Natalia Besil; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen
The influence of insecticides commonly used for agricultural purposes on beehive depopulation in Uruguay was investigated. Honeycombs, bees, honey and propolis from depopulated hives were analyzed for pesticide residues, whereas from active beehives only honey and propolis were evaluated. A total of 37 samples were analyzed, representing 14,800 beehives. In depopulated beehives only imidacloprid and fipronil were detected and in active beehives endosulfan, coumaphos, cypermethrin, ethion and chlorpyrifos were found. Coumaphos was present in the highest concentrations, around 1,000 μg/kg, in all the propolis samples from active beehives. Regarding depopulated beehives, the mean levels of imidacloprid found in honeycomb (377 μg/kg, Standard Deviation: 118) and propolis (60 μg/kg, Standard Deviation: 57) are higher than those described to produce bee disorientation and fipronil levels detected in bees (150 and 170 μg/kg) are toxic per se. The other insecticides found can affect the global fitness of the bees causing weakness and a decrease in their overall productivity. These preliminary results suggest that bees exposed to pesticides or its residues can lead them in different ways to the beehive.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014
Silvina Niell; Verónica Cesio; Julia Hepperle; Daniela Doerk; Larissa Kirsch; Diana Kolberg; Ellen Scherbaum; Michelangelo Anastassiades; Horacio Heinzen
The validation of an analytical procedure for the determination of pesticide residues in beeswax, an interesting matrix for environmental pollution monitoring, is presented. Using the QuEChERS template, the impacts of wax particle size, sample amount, and cleanup procedure (water addition, dispersive solid phase extraction, freeze-out, and combinations thereof) on extraction yield and coextractive load were studied. Sample preparation through liquid-liquid partitioning between acetonitrile and melted wax (∼80 °C), followed by freeze-out and primary-secondary amine dispersive cleanup, was performed on incurred and pesticide-free samples for 51 residues. Determinations were made through LC-MS/MS and GC×GC-TOF, and the whole procedure was validated. Matrix effects were evaluated, with recoveries between 70 and 120% and RSDs below 20% in almost all cases. LC-MS/MS LOQs ranged from 0.01 to 0.1 mg/kg for most pesticides, but for GC-amenable pesticides, GC×GC-TOF sensitivity was lower (0.1-0.2 mg/kg). This methodology can be applied for routine analysis of pesticide residues in beeswax.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2015
Silvina Niell; Florencia Jesús; C. Pérez; Yamandú Mendoza; Rosana Díaz; Jorge Franco; Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen
Beehive products could be powerful monitors of pesticide residues originating in agroecosystems during production cycles. Their ready availability provides enough samples to perform analytical determinations, but their chemical complexity makes residue analysis a real challenge. Taking advantage of the plasticity of QuEChERS coupled to LC-MS/MS, validated methodologies were developed for bees, honey, beeswax, and pollen and applied to real samples for the simultaneous determination of 19 of the most employed pesticides in intensive cropping fields. Beehives placed in Uruguayan agroecosystems accumulated the pesticides thiacloprid, imidacloprid, methomyl, carbaryl, hexythiazox, azoxystrobin, pyraclostrobin, tebuconazole, and haloxyfop-methyl at 0.0001-0.01 mg/kg levels. The oscillations on the amount and occurrence of residue findings for specific apiaries were correlated statistically with the sampling season and the agroecosystem where the beehives were located, showing the potential of bees and bee products to record relevant information to survey the chemicals applied in their surroundings.
Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2010
Silvina Niell; Lucía Pareja; L. Geis Asteggiante; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen
Different extraction procedures and clean-up methods were compared in order to develop a sample preparation procedure for the multi-residue analysis of six post-emergence herbicides (metsulfuron methyl, bensulfuron methyl, pyrazosulfuron ethyl, bentazone, bispyribac sodium and cyhalofop butyl) in rice grains followed by liquid chromatography-diode array detection (LC-DAD). Optimum results were obtained dispersing milled rice grain in water, followed by the addition of 1% acetic acid in acetonitrile, MgSO4 and sodium acetate as a modification of the quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged and safe (QuEChERS) method but no primary and secondary amine (PSA) sorbent was added due to the acidic nature of the herbicides. The method was further expanded to other post-emergence herbicides (quinclorac, clomazone and propanil). Except for quinclorac, which cannot be analysed with this method, the recoveries of the other eight herbicides were in the range 73–111%, with relative standard deviations lower than 12%. Limits of detection (LODs) ranged from 0.03 to 0.08 mg kg−1. A single analyst can extract twelve samples in 4 h. The method presented here allows the simultaneous residue determination of the most common post-emergence herbicides employed in cultivating rice. It is simple, rapid, sensitive, and can be applied routinely to polished rice grain herbicide residue analysis.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011
Silvina Niell; Lucía Pareja; Gabriel González; Joaquín González; Zisis Vryzas; M. Verónica Cesio; Euphemia Papadopoulou-Mourkidou; Horacio Heinzen
A validated analytical method for the multiresidue analysis of 40 organophosphate pesticides (OPs) and conversion products in raw wool has been developed. The method is based on the selective microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) of raw wool with acetonitrile and analysis of extracts by gas chromatography-flame photometric detector. The optimum MAE conditions were 20 min duration at 80 °C with 30 mL of acetonitrile per gram of wool. A validation study was performed according to the European SANCO guidelines 10684/2009. Limits of detection and quantification for all pesticides tested were from 0.01 to 0.2 mg/kg and from 0.2 to 1.0 mg/kg, respectively. The average recoveries of pesticides spiked at different levels were in the range of 70-120% with relative standard deviations of ≤ 20%. The extraction performance was compared to the one obtained with a reference Soxhlet extraction. The method was also applied in the analysis of real wool (after field application) samples.
Journal of Chromatography B | 2012
Anisleidy Rivero; Silvina Niell; Verónica Cesio; M. Pía Cerdeiras; Horacio Heinzen
A general procedure to study the biodegradation of endosulfan under laboratory conditions by white rot fungi isolated from native sources growing in YNB (yeast nitrogen base) media with 1% of glucose is presented. The evaluation of endosulfan biodegradation as well as endosulfan sulfate, endosulfan ether and endosulfan alcohol production throughout the whole bioremedation process was performed using an original and straightforward validated analytical procedure with recoveries between 78 and 112% at all concentration levels studied except for endosulfan sulfate at 50 mg L(-1) that yielded 128% and RSDs<20%. Under the developed conditions, the basidiomycete Bjerkandera adusta was able to degrade 83% of (alpha+beta) endosulfan after 27 days, 6 mg kg(-1) of endosulfan diol were determined; endosulfan ether and endosulfan sulfate were produced below 1 mg kg(-1) (LOQ, limit of quantitation).
Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part B-pesticides Food Contaminants and Agricultural Wastes | 2010
Andrés Pérez-Parada; Joaquín González; Lucía Pareja; Lucía Geis-Asteggiante; Marcos Colazzo; Silvina Niell; Natalia Besil; Gabriel González; Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen
In order to evaluate the extraction of pesticide residues that are transferred to the brew during mate drinking process of P.U.1 yerba mate leaves (Ilex paraguariensis), a special device to simulate the way in which mate is drunk in Uruguay was developed. The transfer to the brew of 12 organophosphates, 5 synthethic pyrethroids and one organochlorine pesticide from spiked samples was studied. The relationship between the transfer data thus obtained and physicochemical properties like water solubility (Ws), octanol-water coefficient (Kow) and Henrys constant (H) was evaluated. The extractability of the pesticide residues from yerba mate can be correlated with log Ws and log Kow. These transfer values allowed the calculation of ARLs (acceptable residue level) for the pesticides following Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), World Health Organizaion (WHO) guidelines. These results can help the future establishment of maximum residue levels (MRLs)
Talanta | 2016
Anisleidy Rivero; Silvina Niell; M. Pía Cerdeiras; Horacio Heinzen; María Verónica Cesio
To assess recalcitrant pesticide bioremediation it is necessary to gradually increase the complexity of the biological system used in order to design an effective biobed assembly. Each step towards this effective biobed design needs a suitable, validated analytical methodology that allows a correct evaluation of the dissipation and bioconvertion. Low recovery yielding methods could give a false idea of a successful biodegradation process. To address this situation, different methods were developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of endosulfan, its main three metabolites, and chlorpyrifos in increasingly complex matrices where the bioconvertor basidiomycete Abortiporus biennis could grow. The matrices were culture media, bran, and finally a laboratory biomix composed of bran, peat and soil. The methodology for the analysis of the first evaluated matrix has already been reported. The methodologies developed for the other two systems are presented in this work. The targeted analytes were extracted from fungi growing over bran in semisolid media YNB (Yeast Nitrogen Based) with acetonitrile using shaker assisted extraction, The salting-out step was performed with MgSO4 and NaCl, and the extracts analyzed by GC-ECD. The best methodology was fully validated for all the evaluated analytes at 1 and 25mgkg(-1) yielding recoveries between 72% and 109% and RSDs <11% in all cases. The application of this methodology proved that A. biennis is able to dissipate 94% of endosulfan and 87% of chlorpyrifos after 90 days. Having assessed that A. biennis growing over bran can metabolize the studied pesticides, the next step faced was the development and validation of an analytical procedure to evaluate the analytes in a laboratory scale biobed composed of 50% of bran, 25% of peat and 25% of soil together with fungal micelium. From the different procedures assayed, only ultrasound assisted extraction with ethyl acetate allowed recoveries between 80% and 110% with RSDs <18%. Linearity, recovery, precision, matrix effect and LODs/LOQs of each method were studied for all the analytes: endosulfan isomers (α & β) and its metabolites (endosulfan sulfate, ether and diol) as well as for chlorpyrifos. In the first laboratory evaluation of these biobeds endosulfan was bioconverted up to 87% and chlorpyrifos more than 79% after 27 days.
Archive | 2011
Verónica Cesio; Silvina Niell; Lucía Pareja; Grisel Fernández; Lucia Geis Asteggiante; Bernardo Böcking; Claudio García; Amadeo R. Fernández-Alba; Horacio Heinzen
Veronica Cesio1, Lucia Pareja1, Silvina Niell1, Lucia Geis Asteggiante1, Bernardo Bocking2, Claudio Garcia3, Grisel Fernandez4, Amadeo R. Fernandez-Alba5 and Horacio Heinzen1 1Farmacognosia y Productos Naturales, Facultad de Quimica UDELAR General Flores 2124, Montevideo 11800, 2Donistar S.C, Col. Rubio, Salto, 3INIA Las Brujas, Las Brujas, Canelones, 4Malherbologia EEMAC, Facultad de Agronomia, UDELAR Km366 Ruta 3 Paysandu, 5 Grupo de Investigacion de Laboratorio de Residuos de Plaguicidas, Almeria, Universidad de Almeria, Canada de San Urbano s/n, Almeria 1,2,3,4Uruguay 5Spain
Talanta | 2018
Florencia Jesús; Ricardo Hladki; Natalia Gérez; Natalia Besil; Silvina Niell; Grisel Fernández; Horacio Heinzen; María Verónica Cesio
The impacts of the modern, agrochemicals based agriculture that threatens the overall systems sustainability, need to be monitored and evaluated. Seeking for agroecosystems monitors, the present article focus in the occurrence and abundance of aquatic macroinvertebrates, that have been frequently used as bioindicators of water quality due to their relationship with land use. Some of these organisms are on the top of the food chain, where bioaccumulation and biomagnification processes can be observed, and they can turn into secondary pollution sources of systems and terrestrial organisms as well. Odonate nymphs, which belong to the functional group of predators, were selected for this study. A methodology to determine 73 pesticide residues in odonate nymphs by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS was developed. A QuEChERS sample preparation strategy was adapted. As it is complex to obtain samples especially in disturbed ecosystems, the method was minimized to a sample size of 200mg of fresh nymphs. The method was validated and good recoveries (71-120%) with RSDs below 20% for the majority of the studied pesticides at least at two of the assayed levels 1, 10 and 50µgkg-1 were obtained. For 32 analytes the limit of quantitation was 1µgkg-1 and 10µgkg-1 for the others. The lineal range was observed between 1-100µgkg-1 in matrix-matched and solvent calibration curves for most of the assessed pesticides. LC-MS/MS matrix effects were evaluated, 40% of the analytes presented low or no signal suppression. Only flufenoxuron presented high matrix effects. The obtained methodology is adequate for pesticide multiresidue analysis in aquatic macroinvertebrates (odonates) aiming to contribute to the ecological state evaluation of freshwater ecosystems.