4.5 Article

Effect of humidity on aflatoxin contamination for selected African leafy vegetables

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY-MYSORE
Volume 59, Issue 7, Pages 2724-2730

Publisher

SPRINGER INDIA
DOI: 10.1007/s13197-021-05293-0

Keywords

Aflatoxin; Fungi; Mycotoxins; Storage; Vegetables

Funding

  1. Coop Research Program of the World Food System Center

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The study found that aflatoxin B1 was prevalent in the selected vegetables, and the contamination level increased with relative humidity for both freshly harvested and dried vegetables, with lower contamination level in dried vegetables.
In this study, the aflatoxin contamination level of selected freshly harvested and dried African leafy vegetables was investigated after inoculation with Aspergillus flavus spores and incubation at 32%, 74%, 84%, and 96% static relative humidity. The study question was whether Aspergillus sp. growth on selected vegetables: Corchorus olitorius, Crotalaria ochroleuca, Vigna unguiculata, Solanum villosum, and Amaranthus blitum can produce aflatoxins. The experiment was replicated thrice and a control sample was included for each replicate. An Agilent 1260 Infinity HPLC system was used for analysis and we quantified the following aflatoxins; B1, B2, G1, and G2 in the selected vegetables. Our results show that aflatoxin B1, G1, and G2 were all present, with the B1 being prevalent. The contamination level increased with relative humidity increase for both freshly harvested and dried vegetables. However, the dried vegetables had a lower contamination level in comparison with freshly harvested. The findings affirm the importance of post-harvest crop preservation to avoid mycotoxin contamination. The vegetables can suffer aflatoxin contamination when exposed to high moisture and ambient temperature and drying is a suitable method of vegetable preservation.

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