Mycotoxins And Food Safety ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY vol.504. Biology and ecology of mycotoxigenic aspergillu s species as related to economic and health concerns, 3-17. 2002 (CROSBI ID 1380)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
DeVries, Jonathan W. ; Trucksess, Mary W. ; Jackson, Lauren S.
engleski
Mycotoxins And Food Safety ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY vol.504. Biology and ecology of mycotoxigenic aspergillu s species as related to economic and health concerns, 3-17. 2002
The fungal genus Aspergillus was established in 1729, and includes species that are adapted to a wide range of environmental conditions. Many aspergilli produce mycotoxins in foods that may be toxic, mutagenic or carcinogenic in animals. Most of the Aspergillus species are soil fungi or saprophytes but some are capable of causing decay in storage, disease in plants or invasive disease in humans and animals. Major agricultural commodities affected before or after harvest by fungal growth and mycotoxins include corn, peanuts, cottonseed, rice, tree nuts, cereal grains, and fruits. Animal products (meat, milk and eggs) can become contaminated because of diet. Aspergillus flavus, A. parasiticus, A. ochraceus, A. niger, A. fumigatus and other aspergilli produce mycotoxins of concern. These include the aflatoxins and ochratoxins, as well as cyclopiazonic acid, patulin, sterigmatocystin, gliotoxin, citrinin and other potentially toxic metabolites.
Ochratoxin-A | Cyclopiazonic Acid | Aflatoxin B-1 | Section Flavi | United-States | Parasiticus | Strains | Transect | Peanuts | Coffee
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Podaci o izdanju
New York (NY) : Boston (MA) : Dordrecht : London : Moskva: Kluwer Academic Publishers ; Plenum Publishers
2002.
0-306-46780-1
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