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June 11, 2025

Trace elements in ginger can indicate a plant's origin

Graphical abstract. Credit: Microchemical Journal (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.microc.2025.113333
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Graphical abstract. Credit: Microchemical Journal (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.microc.2025.113333

Researchers in their laboratory at Örebro University have examined eleven products containing fresh and dried ginger bought from grocery stores in Sweden and Croatia, where the tropical herb originates from China, India, and Nigeria.

The study is in the Microchemical Journal.

"We used strong acids to remove all organic material until we were left with only metals and semi-metals remaining in ionic solutions," says Michaela Zeiner, senior lecturer in chemistry at Örebro University.

The Örebro researchers want to determine the presence of important nutrients such as potassium, calcium, and magnesium, as well as harmful elements such as lead, cadmium, and arsenic. A total of 29 elements were analyzed in the ginger samples.

The researchers found that the levels of different elements differed more in fresh ginger than in dried ginger. "This is because certain elements are reduced by homogenization during drying and grinding," says Zeiner.

The research model could be used to create a database of the elemental content of different plants. This database could serve as an important tool for detecting country-of-origin fraud in the .

"You can compare it to fingerprinting in . Plant fingerprints reveal their origin," says Zeiner.

Although the levels of such as lead, arsenic, and cadmium varied, all the samples remained below the limits set by the World Health Organization. In addition to , soil and growing conditions also influence the levels of elements in the ginger studied.

The researchers also investigated whether the ginger had been contaminated by toxic substances from the packaging.

"We found no transfer of toxic substances from the packaging materials," says Zeiner.

More information: Michaela Zeiner et al, Elemental composition of ginger (Zingiber officinale L.) – Analytical approach and assessment of 29 analytes according to classification approaches, Microchemical Journal (2025).

Provided by Örebro Universitet

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Elemental analysis of ginger samples from different origins shows that trace element profiles can indicate geographical origin, with greater variation in fresh than dried ginger due to processing. All toxic element levels were below WHO limits, and no contamination from packaging was detected. Elemental fingerprinting could help detect food fraud in the industry.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.