Molecules (Apr 2021)

Inorganic Elements in <i>Mytilus galloprovincialis</i> Shells: Geographic Traceability by Multivariate Analysis of ICP-MS Data

  • Tiziana Forleo,
  • Alessandro Zappi,
  • Dora Melucci,
  • Martina Ciriaci,
  • Francesco Griffoni,
  • Simone Bacchiocchi,
  • Melania Siracusa,
  • Tamara Tavoloni,
  • Arianna Piersanti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092634
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 9
p. 2634

Abstract

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The international seafood trade is based on food safety, quality, sustainability, and traceability. Mussels are bio-accumulative sessile organisms that need regular control to guarantee their safe consumption. However, no well-established and validated methods exist to trace mussel origin, even if several attempts have been made over the years. Recently, an inorganic multi-elemental fingerprint coupled to multivariate statistics has increasingly been applied in food quality control. The mussel shell can be an excellent reservoir of foreign inorganic chemical species, allowing recording long-term environmental changes. The present work investigates the multi-elemental composition of mussel shells, including Al, Cu, Cr, Zn, Mn, Cd, Co, U, Ba, Ni, Pb, Mg, Sr, and Ca, determined by inductively-coupled plasma mass-spectrometry in Mytilus galloprovincialis collected along the Central Adriatic Coast (Marche Region, Italy) at 25 different sampling sites (18 farms and 7 natural banks) located in seven areas. The experimental data, coupled with chemometric approaches (principal components analysis and linear discriminant analysis), were used to create a statistical model able to discriminate samples as a function of their production site. The LDA model is suitable for achieving a correct assignment of >90% of individuals sampled to their respective harvesting locations and for being applied to counteract fraud.

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