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Aflatoxin contamination caused by natural fungal infection of preharvest corn
Authors:E. B. Lillehoj  W. F. Kwolek  M. S. Zuber  E. S. Horner  N. W. Widstrom  W. D. Guthrie  M. Turner  D. B. Sauer  W. R. Findley  A. Manwiller  L. M. Josephson
Affiliation:(1) Southern Regional Research Center, Science and Education Administration (SEA), U.S. Department of Agriculture, 70179 New Orleans, Louisiana;(2) Northern Regional Research Center, SEA, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 61604 Peoria, Illinois;(3) Department of Agronomy, University of Missouri, 65201 Columbia, Missouri;(4) Department of Agronomy, University of Florida, 32611 Gainesville, Florida;(5) Southern Grain Insects Laboratory, SEA, USDA, 31794 Tifton, Georgia;(6) Ankeny Research Farm, SEA, USDA, 50021 Ankeny, Iowa;(7) Funks Seed International, 61701 Bloomington, Illinois;(8) U.S. Grain Marketing Research Center, SEA, USDA, 66502 Manhattan, Kansas;(9) Ohio Agricultural and Development Center, SEA, USDA, 44691 Wooster, Ohio;(10) Pee Dee Experiment Station, 29501 Florence, South Carolina;(11) Department of Plant and Soil Science, University of Tennessee, 77843 Knoxville, Tennessee
Abstract:Summary Aflatoxin contamination of developing corn (Zea mays L.) kernels caused by natural infection byAspergillus flavus Link ex Fries was studied in hybrids developed for the U.S. corn belt and for the southern U.S. and grown at diverse locations in 1977. Planting dates were staggered to examine the effect of crop maturity on infection by the toxin-producing fungus. A broad range of toxin values was observed at harvest; some levels exceeded the highest that had been previously recorded in corn. The highest concentration of aflatoxin B1 detected was 8030 ppb. Levels of toxin differed significantly among planting dates in Florida and Georgia; the second planting date at these locations contained the highest toxin levels. Elevated concentrations of toxin were characteristic of kernel samples from southern locations and southeast Missouri; at these locations samples from hybrids developed for the south had significantly lower levels of toxin than hybrids developed for the corn belt. Ears with heavy insect damage had higher toxin levels than ears with less evidence of insect attack.Mention of firm names or trade products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture over other firms or similar products not mentioned.
Keywords:Aflatoxin  Aspergillus flavus  Corn  Fungi Maize  Mycotoxins  Naturally-occurring toxins  Zea mays
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