The
European Commissions’ Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) has reported
10 notifications on aflatoxin B1 in maize of European origin since the last maize
harvest in autumn 2012. In the 10 years prior to the last harvest -- between
2001 and 2011 -- a total of nine cases of aflatoxins were reported in maize.
Aflatoxins have been mainly an “import problem” up to now.
However, global
warming is increasingly affecting the mycotoxin map in Europe, producing “tropical
toxins” within Europe’s borders. This is most likely not the last
case of aflatoxins in maize for European farmers. “Conditions are very
favourable for the growth of Aspergillus in southern areas of the European
mainland due to climate change. This means that Europe will have more
homemade aflatoxin cases in its crops in the future.” says Prof. Rudolf Krska, an
international mycotoxin expert from the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) in Vienna, Austria. “The food & feed industry has to
adapt its risk management to cope with this new threat and minimize aflatoxin
exposure in Europe.”
The origins of the contaminated
maize
reported in the RASFF were mainly southeastern Europe, including Bulgaria,
Greece, Romania, Serbia and in Italy. The average level of aflatoxin B1 was
59.28 ppb (parts per billion or µg/kg) and the maximum 204 ppb in Serbian maize
– 10 times above the maximum level for feed. The EU regulatory limit for
aflatoxin B1 in feedstuff is 20ppb, whereas in food it is 5ppb.
Aflatoxin B1 is one of the most
carcinogenic substances on the planet, 100 times more toxic than pesticides,
for instance. The producing molds, which are different species of Aspergillus,
have been mainly a problem in tropical regions and can either occur on the
field, but also in inappropriate storing conditions. Major maize exporting nations such as Argentina, Brazil and the USA have developed risk-management systems over recent decades to handle the aflatoxin risk. Europe can take these examples to adapt their systems to this new reality where aflatoxins are now on the agenda.
Testing for aflatoxins requires sophisticated sampling methods which need to be done at the very beginning of the supply chain to deal with the heterogenic distribution of this contaminant. Testing methods have to be very sensitive as limits are between 5 and 20 parts per billion (ppb). At the reception point, this testing can be done with lateral flow devices or Fluorometric methods. The reference method of choice in laboratories is nowadays LC-MS/MS, which is a technology that can simultaneously detect all major mycotoxins, including aflatoxins.tions. Major maize exporting
nations such as Argentina, Brazil and the USA have developed risk-management
systems over recent decades to handle the aflatoxin risk. Europe can take these
examples to adapt their systems to this new reality where aflatoxins are now on
the agenda.
10 notifications on aflatoxin B1 found in maize since the last maize harvest in autumn 2012. |
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