Mycotoxins in Sub-Saharan Africa: Present situation, socio-economic impact, awareness, and outlook

Publication Type
Journal contribution (peer reviewed)
Authors
Udomkun, P; Wiredu, A; Nagle, M; Bandyopadhyay, R; Müller, J; Vanlauwe, B
Year of publication
2016
Published in
Food Control
Pubisher
Elsevier
DOI
10.1016/j.foodcont.2016.07.039
Page (from - to)
in print
Keywords
Food regulation, Food safety, Food Security, Fungal contamination, Nutritional quality, Toxicological measurement
Abstract

Many studies have reported the occurrence of mycotoxin in human foods and animal feeds in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Aflatoxins, ochratoxins, fumonisins, and zearalenone are among the most hazardous mycotoxins produced by fungal species, mainly in the genera Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Fusarium. Due to their high stability, mycotoxins are a cause of concern not only during crop production, but also in storage, transport, processing, and post-processing steps. Mycotoxin contamination is one factor that reduces the competitiveness of agricultural commodities from SSA for export. Moreover, these impurities negatively impact the health of humans and livestock which affects household security, livelihood, productivity, and income leading to significant costs and economic losses for the producing countries. Limited knowledge or awareness of most actors along the food and feed chain is considered to be one of the major problems which delay effective counter measures. In the last decades, various accurate and sensitive analytical methods have been developed to detect levels and composition of mycotoxins on food and feed samples such as HPLC, LC-MS, immuno-based assays, and optical methods. Nevertheless, immuno-based techniques are still the most useful for identifying mycotoxins in the field and farm levels as they can be conducted onsite. Although tolerable limits for mycotoxins have been established in many SSA countries, most contamination still exceeds maximum thresholds and continues to pose considerable risk to public health. To address mycotoxin problems in SSA, therefore, possible intervention strategies should provide support for capacity building and supply chain coordination, increased public awareness, and knowledge through education and extension, as well as improved incentives for management of fungal species.

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