Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya

Aflatoxins and fumonisins commonly contaminate key food staples in tropical countries, causing recurring acute and chronic public health problems. The present study was conducted to assess the potential of a simple device designed for density-based sorting of maize for its potential to reduce aflato...

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Autores principales: Ngure, Raphael M., Ngure, C., Achieng, G., Munga, F., Moran, Z., Stafstrom, W., Nelson, R.J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wageningen University & Research 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129373
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author Ngure, Raphael M.
Ngure, C.
Achieng, G.
Munga, F.
Moran, Z.
Stafstrom, W.
Nelson, R.J.
author_browse Achieng, G.
Moran, Z.
Munga, F.
Nelson, R.J.
Ngure, C.
Ngure, Raphael M.
Stafstrom, W.
author_facet Ngure, Raphael M.
Ngure, C.
Achieng, G.
Munga, F.
Moran, Z.
Stafstrom, W.
Nelson, R.J.
author_sort Ngure, Raphael M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Aflatoxins and fumonisins commonly contaminate key food staples in tropical countries, causing recurring acute and chronic public health problems. The present study was conducted to assess the potential of a simple device designed for density-based sorting of maize for its potential to reduce aflatoxins and fumonisins in diverse samples of naturally contaminated maize. A cross sectional survey was conducted, analysing market maize samples (n=204) from eight counties in Western Kenya. A quarter (25%) of the maize samples were contaminated with aflatoxin B1 above the legal limit of 5 μg/kg and nearly half (48%) were contaminated with fumonisins at levels above the legal limit of 2 μg/g. Analysis of additional samples (n=24) from Meru County showed that contamination of maize with the two toxins was also common in Eastern Kenya. A simple density sorter was used to separate grain samples into heavy and light fractions. With an out-sort rate of 31%, density sorting was effective in separating maize by bulk density and 100-kernel weight (P<0.001). Bulk density was negatively correlated with aflatoxins in unsorted (r=-0.20, P<0.01) and heavy fractions (r=-0.32, P<0.01). Density sorting was effective at reducing fumonisins; for maize samples with >1 μg/g, the heavy (accepted) fraction had 66% lower fumonisins than the unsorted maize. After density sorting, the light and heavy fractions fumonisin levels differed by an average of 8.38 μg/g (P<0.001). However, sorting was not effective at significantly reducing aflatoxin levels in maize that was highly contaminated. A simple density sorting equipment that could be adopted by local small-scale millers has potential to reduce fumonisins in maize. Additional and complementary sorting technologies, such as size screening and spectral sorting might improve the effectiveness of reducing aflatoxins in maize.
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spelling CGSpace1293732025-09-08T09:09:13Z Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya Ngure, Raphael M. Ngure, C. Achieng, G. Munga, F. Moran, Z. Stafstrom, W. Nelson, R.J. maize food systems contamination systems mycotoxins kenya density food Aflatoxins and fumonisins commonly contaminate key food staples in tropical countries, causing recurring acute and chronic public health problems. The present study was conducted to assess the potential of a simple device designed for density-based sorting of maize for its potential to reduce aflatoxins and fumonisins in diverse samples of naturally contaminated maize. A cross sectional survey was conducted, analysing market maize samples (n=204) from eight counties in Western Kenya. A quarter (25%) of the maize samples were contaminated with aflatoxin B1 above the legal limit of 5 μg/kg and nearly half (48%) were contaminated with fumonisins at levels above the legal limit of 2 μg/g. Analysis of additional samples (n=24) from Meru County showed that contamination of maize with the two toxins was also common in Eastern Kenya. A simple density sorter was used to separate grain samples into heavy and light fractions. With an out-sort rate of 31%, density sorting was effective in separating maize by bulk density and 100-kernel weight (P<0.001). Bulk density was negatively correlated with aflatoxins in unsorted (r=-0.20, P<0.01) and heavy fractions (r=-0.32, P<0.01). Density sorting was effective at reducing fumonisins; for maize samples with >1 μg/g, the heavy (accepted) fraction had 66% lower fumonisins than the unsorted maize. After density sorting, the light and heavy fractions fumonisin levels differed by an average of 8.38 μg/g (P<0.001). However, sorting was not effective at significantly reducing aflatoxin levels in maize that was highly contaminated. A simple density sorting equipment that could be adopted by local small-scale millers has potential to reduce fumonisins in maize. Additional and complementary sorting technologies, such as size screening and spectral sorting might improve the effectiveness of reducing aflatoxins in maize. 2021-04-12 2023-03-10T14:33:56Z 2023-03-10T14:33:56Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129373 en Open Access Wageningen University & Research Ngure, Raphael M.; Ngure, C.; Achieng, G.; Munga, F.; Moran, Z.; Stafstrom, W.; Nelson, R.J. 2021. Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya. World Mycotoxin Journal 14: 165-178
spellingShingle maize
food systems
contamination
systems
mycotoxins
kenya
density
food
Ngure, Raphael M.
Ngure, C.
Achieng, G.
Munga, F.
Moran, Z.
Stafstrom, W.
Nelson, R.J.
Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title_full Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title_fullStr Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title_short Mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in Kenya
title_sort mycotoxins contamination of market maize and the potential of density sorting in reducing exposure in unregulated food systems in kenya
topic maize
food systems
contamination
systems
mycotoxins
kenya
density
food
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129373
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