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Establishing a baseline dataset of factors associated with mycotoxin risk in Indian village food systems

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Relation http://oar.icrisat.org/10342/
https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/doi/pdf/10.1094/PHYTO-107-2-S2.5
 
Title Establishing a baseline dataset of factors associated with mycotoxin risk in Indian village food systems
 
Creator Wenndt, A
Sudini, H
Nelson, R
 
Subject Plant Pathology
Aflatoxins
 
Description Mycotoxin contamination in food systems has serious implications for agricultural output and human health. Here, we report on the results of a
preliminary survey of mycotoxin risk factors in 1 village in Telangana and a subsequent survey across 9 villages spanning cultural and agroecological
contexts. In the preliminary survey, aflatoxin was detected in 6.5% of household food samples, of which 35.7% exceeded the Indian legal limit (30 ppb)
for consumption. Fumonisin was detected in 20% of all samples analyzed, but at low levels (etc.) or grown on a villager’s own farm had higher aflatoxin
levels than food items acquired via market transactions. Surveys in 9 villages yielded 811 samples of staple food items and a semi-qualitative database of
household- and vendor-level risk factors. Aflatoxin B1 was detected (≥1 ppb) in 21.6% of food samples. Overall, 10.5% of samples were contaminated
with aflatoxin B1 at levels greater than the Indian legal limit. Groundnut, maize, sorghum, and rice were the most contaminated commodities in both
surveys. Observed food consumption behaviors suggest that these commodities may be important contributors to dietary aflatoxin intake across all sites.
Ongoing analyses will enable deeper evaluation of the major behavioral, geospatial, and biological contributors to mycotoxin accumulation within and
across study sites.
 
Publisher American Phytopathological Society (APS)
 
Date 2017-02
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Identifier Wenndt, A and Sudini, H and Nelson, R (2017) Establishing a baseline dataset of factors associated with mycotoxin risk in Indian village food systems. Phytopathology, 107 (2). p. 13.