Department of Plant Protection, Phytopathology Unit, Ecole Nationale d'Agriculture de Meknès, Km 10, Route Haj Kaddour, BP S/40, 50001, Meknès, Morocco.
Department of AgroBiosciences, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University, Lot 660, Hay Moulay Rachid, Ben Guerir, 43150, Morocco.
Mycotoxin Res. 2024 Nov;40(4):495-517. doi: 10.1007/s12550-024-00555-0. Epub 2024 Sep 12.
Globally, maize (Zea mays L.) is deemed an important cereal that serves as a staple food and feed for humans and animals, respectively. Across the East African Community, maize is the staple food responsible for providing over one-third of calories in diets. Ideally, stored maize functions as man-made grain ecosystems, with nutritive quality changes influenced predominantly by chemical, biological, and physical factors. Food spoilage and fungal contamination are convergent reasons that contribute to the exacerbation of mycotoxins prevalence, particularly when storage conditions have deteriorated. In Kenya, aflatoxins are known to be endemic with the 2004 acute aflatoxicosis outbreak being described as one of the most ravaging epidemics in the history of human mycotoxin poisoning. In Tanzania, the worst aflatoxin outbreak occurred in 2016 with case fatalities reaching 50%. Similar cases of aflatoxicoses have also been reported in Uganda, scenarios that depict the severity of mycotoxin contamination across this region. Rwanda, Burundi, and South Sudan seemingly have minimal occurrences and fatalities of aflatoxicoses and aflatoxin contamination. Low diet diversity tends to aggravate human exposure to aflatoxins since maize, as a dietetic staple, is highly aflatoxin-prone. In light of this, it becomes imperative to formulate and develop workable control frameworks that can be embraced in minimizing aflatoxin contamination throughout the food chain. This review evaluates the scope and magnitude of aflatoxin contamination in post-harvest maize and climate susceptibility within an East African Community context. The paper also treats the potential green control strategies against Aspergillus spoilage including biocontrol-prophylactic handling for better and durable maize production.
在全球范围内,玉米(Zea mays L.)被认为是一种重要的谷物,分别是人类和动物的主食和饲料。在东非共同体,玉米是主食,为饮食提供超过三分之一的热量。理想情况下,储存的玉米是人为的谷物生态系统,其营养质量变化主要受化学、生物和物理因素的影响。粮食腐败和真菌污染是导致霉菌毒素流行加剧的共同原因,尤其是在储存条件恶化时。在肯尼亚,黄曲霉毒素是地方性的,2004 年的急性黄曲霉毒素中毒暴发被描述为人类霉菌毒素中毒史上最严重的流行病之一。在坦桑尼亚,2016 年发生了最严重的黄曲霉毒素暴发,病死率达到 50%。乌干达也报告了类似的黄曲霉中毒病例,这些情况描绘了该地区霉菌毒素污染的严重程度。卢旺达、布隆迪和南苏丹似乎很少发生和死亡黄曲霉中毒和黄曲霉毒素污染。低饮食多样性往往会加剧人类接触黄曲霉毒素的风险,因为玉米作为饮食中的主食,极易受到黄曲霉毒素的影响。有鉴于此,制定和开发可行的控制框架以减少整个食物链中的黄曲霉毒素污染变得至关重要。本文评估了东非共同体背景下收获后玉米中黄曲霉毒素污染的范围和程度以及气候易感性。本文还探讨了针对曲霉腐败的潜在绿色控制策略,包括生物防治-预防性处理,以实现更好和更持久的玉米生产。