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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 1999, p. 41-44, Vol. 65, No. 1
Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service,
Nairobi, Kenya,1 and
Mycotoxin Research
Unit, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Peoria,
Illinois 616042
Received 27 May 1998/Accepted 14 October 1998
Maize kernel samples were collected in 1996 from smallholder farm
storages in the districts of Bomet, Bungoma, Kakamega, Kericho, Kisii,
Nandi, Siaya, Trans Nzoia, and Vihiga in the tropical highlands of
western Kenya. Two-thirds of the samples were good-quality maize,
and one-third were poor-quality maize with a high incidence of visibly
diseased kernels. One hundred fifty-three maize samples were assessed
for Fusarium infection by culturing kernels on a selective
medium. The isolates obtained were identified to the species level
based on morphology and on formation of the sexual stage in
Gibberella fujikuroi mating population tests.
Fusarium moniliforme (G. fujikuroi mating
population A) was isolated most frequently, but F. subglutinans (G. fujikuroi mating population E),
F. graminearum, F. oxysporum, F. solani, and other Fusarium species were also
isolated. The high incidence of kernel infection with the
fumonisin-producing species F. moniliforme indicated a
potential for fumonisin contamination of Kenyan maize. However, analysis of 197 maize kernel samples by high-performance liquid chromatography found little fumonisin B1 in most of the
samples. Forty-seven percent of the samples contained fumonisin
B1 at levels above the detection limit (100 ng/g), but only
5% were above 1,000 ng/g, a proposed level of concern for human
consumption. The four most-contaminated samples, with fumonisin
B1 levels ranging from 3,600 to 11,600 ng/g, were from
poor-quality maize collected in the Kisii district. Many samples with a
high incidence of visibly diseased kernels contained little or no
fumonisin B1, despite the presence of F. moniliforme. This result may be attributable to the inability of
F. moniliforme isolates present in Kenyan maize to produce
fumonisins, to the presence of other ear rot fungi, and/or to
environmental conditions unfavorable for fumonisin production.
0099-2240/99/$00.00+0
Incidence of Fusarium spp. and Levels of
Fumonisin B1 in Maize in Western Kenya
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Mycotoxin
Research Unit, USDA/ARS/NCAUR, 1815 N. University St., Peoria, IL
61604. Phone: (309) 681-6378. Fax: (309) 681-6671. E-mail:
desjarae{at}mail.ncaur.usda.gov.
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