Cadmium's route into chocolate
University of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences
Committed
chocoholics, be warned. A health-robbing heavy metal, cadmium, lurks in the
velvety recesses of your favorite indulgence.Study co-author Marlon Ac-Pangan visits a cacao farm in
Lachua region, Guatemala
Researchers have chased the source of cacao's cadmium contamination for years, but an array of distinct sampling methods and sites led to mixed results.
In a new analysis,
University of Illinois scientists consider the soil factors influencing
cadmium's ride into cacao beans, with the aim of recommending feasible and
cost-effective ways farmers can minimize uptake.
"Instead of trying to glean universal drivers of cadmium uptake from single studies conducted here or there, we said, 'let's look at this across the entire Cacao Belt,'" says Jordon Wade, who coordinated the effort as a postdoctoral researcher at U of I. Wade is now an assistant professor at the University of Missouri.
Wade
worked with graduate students in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and
Environmental Sciences (ACES) at Illinois, as well as crop sciences assistant
professor Andrew Margenot. Together, they re-analyzed thousands of data points
reported in dozens of published studies from cacao cropping systems around the
world. Their synthesis appears in PLOS ONE.
"We
found it was the total amount of soil cadmium and pH that explained the amount
of cadmium that ends up in the bean," Margenot says. "It seems a
little too simplistic, but it is consistent with soil chemistry theory. When
you get into more acidic pH values, cadmium is more soluble and more available
to the plant. That was the major takeaway."
Acidic
pH values also contributed to bioaccumulation of cadmium in leaves and beans,
Wade says.
Understanding
the routes of cadmium into the bean is the first step to mitigating its uptake,
the researchers say. And there's more reason than ever to keep cadmium levels
low.
Recent
EU regulations cap cadmium at 0.1 to 0.8 milligrams per kilogram, depending on
the cocoa product. Margenot says the standard is forcing many companies to
limit imports from cacao-producing regions in the global south where soils are
naturally high in the heavy metal.
While
cadmium in cocoa products is a legitimate health concern -- chocolate is a
leading source of dietary cadmium in non-smokers -- the regulation is bad news
for 8 million smallholder farmers for whom cacao is an important cash crop.
"These
farmers might make $1,000 a year if they're lucky. Heavy metal remediation is
out of reach for them," Margenot says. "So, after finding that soil
pH and total cadmium are the biggest factors that control cadmium in the bean,
we're finding evidence pointing to lime as a mitigation measure."
Liming
soils brings down the acidity, making cadmium less soluble and less likely to
be taken up by plants. But Margenot admits liming isn't necessarily simple or
affordable -- or even accessible -- for Amazonian farmers. The product isn't
likely available at the corner store, and although lime is relatively
inexpensive in the U.S., it's not cheap in high-poverty contexts.
Despite
these challenges, Margenot says lime generally increases yield for cacao.
Because it could have dual benefits, liming could be worth the effort and cost.
"If
you're going to ask people to invest in expensive inputs, assuming they can
find them, it's nice if they can deliver multiple benefits," he says.
In
their review, Wade and Margenot noted studies reporting variation among cacao
cultivars in terms of cadmium uptake. Could plant breeding be the answer?
"It's
really tough to fight soil chemistry on anything, so breeding cacao varieties
or rootstocks that are less susceptible to uptake might be one way out of this.
The problem is that most of the world's fine cacao is grown by small farmers,
largely in South America, on maybe 1 or 2 hectares," Margenot says.
"They can't really afford to invest in new germplasm."
Although
the study offers no silver bullet for impoverished growers, it provides a map
for future research.
"By
critically evaluating the available data and methods, we now know total cadmium
and pH are key factors. We also found things like sampling depth matter. Those
factors are not currently standardized across studies. It's kind of a
mess," Margenot says. "As a community of researchers, we could be
doing a lot better. But now we know a way forward."
Wade
adds, "There are lots of strategies we can try, like matching rootstocks
to soil conditions. Our results here help us better direct our energy and
resources."
By
the way, neither researcher plans to stop indulging in chocolate, despite the
dangers of cadmium.
"I've
eaten cacao beans from farms in Ecuador without hesitation. It takes a lot of
chocolate to get to dangerous levels for adults," Margenot says. "I think
it's fair to say people shouldn't stop eating chocolate."
Wade
adds, "Especially here in the U.S., where so many people eat milk
chocolate. It has much lower cacao content, and therefore much lower cadmium
content. And chocolate companies blend cacao sources and make other efforts to
reduce cadmium in their products. But for me, personally, I still enjoy dark
chocolate."