Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are anthropogenic persistent organic pollutants (POPs) that are ubiquitous within the 
environment. Despite their worldwide ban in 2004 by the Stockholm Convention on POPs (chm.pops.int), up to 53% of 
the European citizens exceed the tolerable weekly PCB intake, with the ingestion of food of animal origin as the main 
exposure pathway. Only bovine meat and dairy products already contribute more than 70% to the total dietary PCB 
exposure. To reduce this exposure, authorities have set maximum regulatory levels in food, to which suckling cow herds 
have been shown to be occasionally non-compliant. Their exposure risk is enhanced by involuntary ingestion of soil 
(up to 10% of the total diet) while grazing, whereas suckling by the calves results in bioaccumulation. To ensure the 
chemical food safety and sustainability of grass-based suckling beef husbandries, it is mandatory to characterize the 
transgenerational fate of PCBs from diffusive grass and soil sources. Thus far, studies examining the PCB fate, including
a detailed assessment of absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) processes, in suckling cow-calf 
pairs are scarce, as it has primarily been described in dairy cows and non-lactating ewes. Additionally, studies have 
shown that physiological traits are important to consider, as these can influence the POP fate and obviously differ 
among dairy cows, suckling cows, and growing calves. The aims were (i) to characterize PCB congener-specific ADME 
kinetics in cows and calves when exposed via a diffusive soil source, and (ii) to quantify the PCB milk accumulation and 
decontamination toxicokinetics during full lactation.