The presence of molds, especially certain species of , in food commodities may contribute to aflatoxin contamination. The aim of this study was to determine the biodiversity of species in dairy feeds from farms in select locations in Zimbabwe and assess their aflatoxin production potential using a polyphasic approach. A total of 96 feed samples were collected, which consisted of dairy feed concentrate, mixed ration, brewers' spent grain, and grass from 13 farms during the dry season (August-October, 2016) and the following rainy season (January-March, 2017). A total of 199 presumptive isolates representing four sections from genus (, , , and ) were recovered from the feeds. Section , which includes several aflatoxin producers, constituted 23% ( = 46) of the isolates. Species from this section were , , , , and , and 39 (84.4%) of these showed evidence of aflatoxin production in plate assays. Of the 46 section isolates examined, some lacked one or more of the five targeted aflatoxin cluster genes (, , , , and ). The presence of the five genes was as follows: (76.9%), (48.7%), (74.4%), (64.1%), and (79.5%). This study highlights the species diversity of aflatoxigenic fungi that have the potential to contaminate different types of feed for dairy cows. Our findings underscore the importance of preventing contamination of feedstuffs by these fungi so that aflatoxins do not end up in the diets of consumers.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7859627 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.599605 | DOI Listing |
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