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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Studies on the biocontrol of aflatoxin in maize in Thailand

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Pages 1070-1091 | Received 23 Jan 2015, Accepted 10 Mar 2015, Published online: 05 May 2015
 

Abstract

Aflatoxins in maize and peanuts remain a major cause of liver cancer and other human and animal health issues. The principal causal fungi are Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus. Relatively little attention has been paid to reducing aflatoxin formation before harvest. The most promising approach is biocontrol by competitive exclusion. This project aimed to demonstrate the efficacy of locally isolated strains of A. flavus for biocontrol of aflatoxin in maize in Thailand. After a rigorous process utilising molecular methods was used to select non-toxigenic A. flavus strains, field inoculum was produced by using hulled rice coated with A. flavus spores in molasses. Field experiments were conducted over two years in two districts, one of light sandy soil (Chokchai), the other a heavy, close textured, soil (Pakchong). Postharvest treatments representative of local practice were also undertaken. Crops 1 and 2 were not significantly contaminated with aflatoxin at the time of harvest, so any impact of biocontrol could not be assessed. However, wet shelling plus storage before drying resulted in increased aflatoxin contamination; biocontrol had no impact on this increase. In crops 3 and 4, biocontrol had a beneficial impact in some freshly harvested maize. Biocontrol treatments also significantly reduced aflatoxin contamination in samples from some treatments stored for two or four days after shelling, but had minimal effect in others. These experiments demonstrated that biocontrol can be highly effective in reducing aflatoxin contamination in maize in Thailand, both at harvest and during poor postharvest crop handling. However, results were inconsistent.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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