Assessment of Dioxin Concentration in Soil and Edible Plants Around Industrial Sites in Koko Town, Southern Nigeria
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Abstract
Dioxins are a class of persistent organic pollutants with increasing global prevalence and deleterious
effects on the environment and human health. However, studies on the distribution, bioaccumulation, and
health effects associated with dioxin in environmental media and food products remain low in developing
economies. This study evaluated dioxin concentrations in soil and five vegetables and medicinal plants
around industrial sites in Koko town, Delta State, Nigeria. Samples of soil and plant tissues were extracted
for the various dioxin analytes using the Soxhlet method and analysed with GC-MS. The mean concentration
of dioxin in soil was 2.937ppb, and that for plants was 2.864ppb. These values are higher than the permissible
limits for dioxin congeners in soil and plants respectively. The bioaccumulation factor of dioxin in plants
was in the order of Pueraria montana (60.75), Ceiba pentandra (8.91), Chromolaena odorata (1.29), Musa
sp. (0.83), and Vermonia amygdalina (0.33). However, the edible plants fell within the estimated daily intake
of 0.03mg kg-1 and hazard ratio of 1.0 as stipulated by USEPA, indicating no immediate health risk for
people consuming vegetables in the community
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Michael, A., Ekperusi, O. A., Okeke, P. N., Ihejirika, C. E. and Ejiogu, C. C. (2025). Assessment of Dioxin Concentration in Soil and Edible Plants Around Industrial Sites in Koko Town, Southern Nigeria. SPE Nigeria Annual International Conference and Exhibition D031S020R006