Sea Fisheries Protection Authority, Clonakilty, Co. Cork P85 TX47, Ireland.
Toxins (Basel). 2018 Mar 10;10(3):118. doi: 10.3390/toxins10030118.
Food safety risk assessment in the European Union (EU) recognises consumer illness that arises from marine biotoxins as a risk associated with bivalve mollusc consumption. EU food regulations contain various general food safety obligations, which should contribute significantly to managing this risk. EU food regulations additionally impose various specific obligations on both Food Business Operators and Competent Authorities in order to manage the marine biotoxin food safety risk in the bivalve mollusc food-chain. These have a particular focus on the pre-harvest component of the food-chain. A central component of these specific systems is the requirement for ongoing monitoring of phytoplankton and biotoxin concentrations in water and molluscs, respectively. This monitoring explicitly brings a potential outcome of closing production areas delineated by classification to prohibit the harvest of bivalve molluscs as food from those areas when acceptable biotoxin concentrations are exceeded. This review considers the utility of these systems, at conceptual and practical levels, and explores their contribution to an effective regulatory risk management approach.
欧盟食品安全风险评估将因海洋生物毒素而导致的消费者疾病视为与双壳贝类消费相关的风险。欧盟食品法规包含各种一般食品安全义务,这将极大地有助于管理这一风险。欧盟食品法规还对食品经营者和主管当局规定了各种具体义务,以管理贝类食物链中的海洋生物毒素食品安全风险。这些义务特别侧重于食物链的收获前环节。这些特定制度的一个核心组成部分是要求对水中浮游植物和贝类中的生物毒素浓度进行持续监测。这种监测明确带来了一个潜在的结果,即当可接受的生物毒素浓度超标时,关闭通过分类划定的生产区域,禁止从这些区域收获双壳贝类作为食品。本审查从概念和实践两个层面考虑了这些系统的实用性,并探讨了它们对有效监管风险管理方法的贡献。