MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA

Mycotoxins which are secondary metabolites of fungi contaminate agricultural products such as corn and have deleterious effects on human and animal. The objective of this study was to evaluate the mycotoxin contamination on local and imported corn samples collected from different feed mills in Indon...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Budi Tangendjaja, Sri Rachmawati, Elizabeth Wina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesian Center for Agricultural Library and Technology Dissemination 2016-10-01
Series:Indonesian Journal of Agricultural Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejurnal.litbang.pertanian.go.id/index.php/ijas/article/view/606
id doaj-72703b64535c446f933c9ca7d6065939
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72703b64535c446f933c9ca7d60659392020-11-24T23:06:23ZengIndonesian Center for Agricultural Library and Technology DisseminationIndonesian Journal of Agricultural Science1411-982X2354-85092016-10-0192687610.21082/ijas.v9n2.2008.68-76389MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIABudi Tangendjaja0Sri Rachmawati1Elizabeth Wina2Indonesian Research Institute for Animal ProductionIndonesian Research Center for Veterinary ScienceIndonesian Research Institute for Animal ProductionMycotoxins which are secondary metabolites of fungi contaminate agricultural products such as corn and have deleterious effects on human and animal. The objective of this study was to evaluate the mycotoxin contamination on local and imported corn samples collected from different feed mills in Indonesia. Three hundred fifty six of corn samples (0.50 kg each) were sent by several feed mills to the Indonesian Research Institute for Animal Production during 2005-2006. The background information accompanied with each sample was country/province of origins, harvesting seasons, postharvest drying methods, moisture levels, grades, and varieties. The samples were analyzed for various mycotoxins, i.e aflatoxin (AFL), ochratoxin (OCRA), zearalenone (ZEN), fumonisin (FUM), deoxynivalenol (DON), and T2 toxin using commercial kits, except for AFL which was analysed using a kit developed by the Indonesian Research Center for Veterinary Science. The results showed that average AFL level in the contaminated corn originated from Indonesia was 59 µg kg-1, almost 7 times higher than that imported from the USA or Argentina. Among the types of mycotoxins detected, FUM was the highest with an average of 1193 µg kg-1, followed by DON, ZEN and OCRA at level of 324, 22 and 2 µg kg-1, respectively. Mycotoxin levels in the contaminated local corn samples varied depending on the province of origins as well as harvesting seasons, postharvest drying methods, and moisture contents. The least mycotoxin contaminations were found on corn originated from North<br />Sumatra and Lampung with the AFL levels were &lt; 20 and &lt; 50 µg kg-1, respectively, lower than those from East Java, Central Java and South Sulawesi (64-87 µg kg-1). Mycotoxin levels, however, were less affected by grading made by feed mills and corn varieties. It is indicated that AFL was the most important mycotoxin as far as for animal feeding concerned, as it contaminated almost 50% of local corn with the level of contamination above the Indonesian National Standard, i.e. 50 µg kg-1. The study suggests that postharvest methods of local corn must be improved to reduce mycotoxin contamination.http://ejurnal.litbang.pertanian.go.id/index.php/ijas/article/view/606Cornmycotoxinsanimal feedIndonesia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Budi Tangendjaja
Sri Rachmawati
Elizabeth Wina
spellingShingle Budi Tangendjaja
Sri Rachmawati
Elizabeth Wina
MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
Indonesian Journal of Agricultural Science
Corn
mycotoxins
animal feed
Indonesia
author_facet Budi Tangendjaja
Sri Rachmawati
Elizabeth Wina
author_sort Budi Tangendjaja
title MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
title_short MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
title_full MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
title_fullStr MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
title_full_unstemmed MYCOTOXIN CONTAMINATION ON CORN USED BY FEED MILLS IN INDONESIA
title_sort mycotoxin contamination on corn used by feed mills in indonesia
publisher Indonesian Center for Agricultural Library and Technology Dissemination
series Indonesian Journal of Agricultural Science
issn 1411-982X
2354-8509
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Mycotoxins which are secondary metabolites of fungi contaminate agricultural products such as corn and have deleterious effects on human and animal. The objective of this study was to evaluate the mycotoxin contamination on local and imported corn samples collected from different feed mills in Indonesia. Three hundred fifty six of corn samples (0.50 kg each) were sent by several feed mills to the Indonesian Research Institute for Animal Production during 2005-2006. The background information accompanied with each sample was country/province of origins, harvesting seasons, postharvest drying methods, moisture levels, grades, and varieties. The samples were analyzed for various mycotoxins, i.e aflatoxin (AFL), ochratoxin (OCRA), zearalenone (ZEN), fumonisin (FUM), deoxynivalenol (DON), and T2 toxin using commercial kits, except for AFL which was analysed using a kit developed by the Indonesian Research Center for Veterinary Science. The results showed that average AFL level in the contaminated corn originated from Indonesia was 59 µg kg-1, almost 7 times higher than that imported from the USA or Argentina. Among the types of mycotoxins detected, FUM was the highest with an average of 1193 µg kg-1, followed by DON, ZEN and OCRA at level of 324, 22 and 2 µg kg-1, respectively. Mycotoxin levels in the contaminated local corn samples varied depending on the province of origins as well as harvesting seasons, postharvest drying methods, and moisture contents. The least mycotoxin contaminations were found on corn originated from North<br />Sumatra and Lampung with the AFL levels were &lt; 20 and &lt; 50 µg kg-1, respectively, lower than those from East Java, Central Java and South Sulawesi (64-87 µg kg-1). Mycotoxin levels, however, were less affected by grading made by feed mills and corn varieties. It is indicated that AFL was the most important mycotoxin as far as for animal feeding concerned, as it contaminated almost 50% of local corn with the level of contamination above the Indonesian National Standard, i.e. 50 µg kg-1. The study suggests that postharvest methods of local corn must be improved to reduce mycotoxin contamination.
topic Corn
mycotoxins
animal feed
Indonesia
url http://ejurnal.litbang.pertanian.go.id/index.php/ijas/article/view/606
work_keys_str_mv AT buditangendjaja mycotoxincontaminationoncornusedbyfeedmillsinindonesia
AT srirachmawati mycotoxincontaminationoncornusedbyfeedmillsinindonesia
AT elizabethwina mycotoxincontaminationoncornusedbyfeedmillsinindonesia
_version_ 1725623313789616128