posted on 2005-03-23, 00:00authored byJanice K. Huwe, David J. Smith
A dioxin-contaminated mineral supplement was used to study the bioaccumulation and elimination
of dioxins in two dairy cows. The supplement was mixed into the total maintenance ration and fed to
the cows for 40 days after which unfortified diets were fed for 40 additional days. Dioxins and coplanar
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were measured twice a week in the milk and in selected tissues of
the cows, one at death (day 10 of withdrawal) and one at slaughter (day 40 of withdrawal). The
dioxins and PCBs were readily transferred into the milk, and at steady state, total toxic equivalents
were concentrated 6-fold into the milk fat from the diet. Bioaccumulation was inversely related to
chlorination number. The elimination of dioxins and PCBs in milk was biphasic. With the exception
of 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodioxin and both octachlorinated congeners, dioxin and furan half-lives in
milk were approximately 3−5 days for the α-phase and 35−50 days for the β-phase. PCB-169 had
a longer half-life: 11 (α) and 200 days (β). When milk and feed samples from Minnesota farms that
had used similar contaminated mineral supplements were analyzed, no elevated dioxin levels were
found in milk. It appeared that although the dioxins from the mineral supplements have the potential
to bioaccumulate, dilution into the total diet was sufficient to prevent a significant rise in the dioxin
concentrations in the milk at these farms.
Keywords: Dioxins; polychlorinated biphenyls; cows; milk; bioaccumulation; half-life; mineral supplement