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Transfer of melamine during crop growth: impact on crop food safety

After the melamine contamination incident sparked global food safety concerns, a key question still remains: can plants absorb melamine from soil or fertilizers and accumulate it in edible parts?

The study by the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences tested wheat and corn to assess melamine’s absorption, transport, and safety. The research results provide clear and scientifically supported answers for agriculture, food security, and fertilizer security.

This article summarizes the research methods, results, and conclusions on the transfer of melamine in crops and the safety of fertilizers that may contain trace amounts of melamine.

Why worry about the transfer of melamine during crop growth

Melamine powder (C₃H₆N₆) and its hydrolysis product cyanuric acid (C₃H₃N₃O₃) can enter the environment from several sources:

  • Wastewater from melamine manufacturing plants

  • Agricultural use of melamine‑containing sludge or manure (since livestock may excrete unmetabolized melamine)

  • Fertilizers produced from urea or ammonium salts, where high‑temperature processing can generate trace amounts of melamine as a by‑product

  • Irrigation water contaminated by industrial discharge

If crops absorb melamine through their roots and translocate it to grains or leaves, then even low‑level environmental contamination could lead to dietary exposure. Furthermore, melamine and cyanuric acid together form insoluble crystals that are more toxic than either compound alone.

Experimental Design

  • Crops: Wheat , Corn
  • Melamine concentrations: 0, 0.75, 1.5, 3.0 g/L
  • Application: root irrigation only (no leaf contact)
  • Detection: HPLC for melamine and cyanuric acid
  • Growth period: 15 days

Core Findings

Plants Do NOT Absorb Melamine From Soil

In both wheat and corn:
No significant difference in melamine content between control and treated groups.
Plant melamine levels did not rise with increasing external melamine concentration.
Conclusion: Plants cannot directly take up and translocate melamine from soil or water into aboveground tissues.

Plants Naturally Produce Melamine & Cyanuric Acid

All test plants contained small, stable amounts of melamine, even in the blank control group:
Wheat: ~0.22 mg/kg dry weight
Corn: ~0.14 mg/kg dry weight
This proves plants naturally synthesize melamine powder during metabolism.

Cyanuric Acid Levels Are Much Higher

Plant cyanuric acid content was 50–100 times higher than that of melamine.
No correlation between melamine and cyanuric acid in plants.
They belong to different metabolic pathways.

Melamine in Soil Does NOT Harm Plant Growth

Even at high concentrations, melamine had no negative effect on wheat or corn growth, development, or appearance.

Melamine in Fertilizers Is Safe

Since plants do not absorb melamine and naturally contain trace levels:
Melamine in urea-based fertilizers does not affect plant safety.
Routine testing for melamine in fertilizers is unnecessary and adds avoidable cost.

Final Conclusions: Transfer of melamine during crop growth

  • Plants do not absorb or accumulate melamine from soil or fertilizer.
  • Trace levels of melamine in crops are from natural plant synthesis, not from external sources.
  • Melamine in soil or fertilizer does not harm crop growth.
  • Using fertilizers with low melamine content is safe for agriculture.
  • Melamine and cyanuric acid in plants are metabolically independent.

This study confirms that melamine in soil or fertilizer does not enter the food chain through staple crops — providing important scientific support for food safety and agricultural policy.

FAQ

Q1: Can melamine contaminate vegetables grown in fields fertilized with melamine‑containing manure?

According to this study, no. Melamine is not taken up by plant roots. Even if manure contains melamine, it will stay in the soil and not translocate to edible plant parts.

Q2: I saw a news report about melamine found in eggs or meat. Is that from plant feed?

Yes. Those cases usually involve animals (chickens, pigs) that were fed melamine‑adulterated feed. Animals can absorb melamine, but plants cannot. The study confirms that feed crops grown on clean soil are safe.

Q3: Does organic farming have any advantage regarding melamine?

Not specifically. Melamine is not a pesticide or fertilizer. Both conventional and organic crops naturally contain trace amounts of melamine/cyanuric acid from endogenous synthesis.

Q4: What about hydroponic vegetables grown in melamine‑contaminated water?

The study used soil, not hydroponics. In soil, melamine may be adsorbed or degraded. Hydroponic systems without soil could theoretically allow some uptake, but this has not been tested. However, melamine is not a common water pollutant in agriculture.

Q5: Should we stop using urea‑based fertilizers because they might contain trace melamine?

No. The study explicitly states that even high levels of melamine did not affect crops. The benefits of urea fertilizers far outweigh any theoretical risks posed by trace impurities.

Q6: What is the significance of cyanuric acid in plants?

Cyanuric acid is present at higher levels than melamine. However, like melamine, it is not absorbed from soil – plants produce it internally. Its biological role is unknown, but it does not appear to come from environmental contamination.

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