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Crop and Pasture Science Crop and Pasture Science Society
Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The mycotoxins dash 4-deoxynivalenol, zearalenone and aflatoxin dash in weather-damaged wheat harvested 1983-1985 in south-eastern Queensland

BJ Blaney, CJ Moore and AL Tyler

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 38(6) 993 - 1000
Published: 1987

Abstract

A survey for various mycotoxins was carried out on samples of all wheat delivered to nine storage and marketing depots in south-eastern Queensland, selected as most likely to receive mycotoxin-contaminated grain. All wheat was surveyed during 1983, when the degree of weather damage was high. Samples of the poorest grade of wheat from these depots were also surveyed in 1984 and 1985. The surveys included all regions where head scab of wheat caused by Fusarium graminearum Schwabe Group 2 had been reported to occur at significant levels. 4-Deoxynivalenol was detected in nearly all pooled samples representing bulk wheat at concentrations ranging from traces of <0.01 up to 1.7 mg kg-l. The highest concentration of zearlenone detected in a pooled wheat sample was 0.04 mg kg-l. In a few samples representing individual wheat deliveries and with up to 2.8% by weight of pink grains, 4-deoxynivalenol concentrations ranged up to 11.7 mg kg-1 and zearalenone up to 0.43 mg kg-l. Aflatoxins B1, B2, G1 and G2 were detected in only one pooled sample of wheat, at a total aflatoxin concentration of 0.003 mg kg-1. Ochratoxin A, sterigmatocystin and T-2 toxin were not detected. Higher concentrations of mycotoxins were found in the poorer grades of wheat.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9870993

© CSIRO 1987

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