Citation:
Sultan, Y. & Magan, N. (2010). Mycotoxigenic fungi in peanuts from different
geographic regions of Egypt. Mycotoxin Research, Volume 26, Number 2, May 2010,
pp133-140
Abstract:
To understand the importance of mycotoxigenic fungi in Egyptian peanuts, samples
from five regions (Alexandria, El-Beheira, El-Sharqiya, El-Daqahelaya in
northern Egypt and Asyut, southern Egypt) in two seasons (2007, 2008) were
collected. Aspergillus was consistently the most frequent genus in seeds and in-
shell peanuts and was the dominant mycotoxigenic component of the mycobiota.
There was no direct correlation between the moisture content of the samples and
the fungal populations on peanut seeds tested from different regions. The most
common species were from Aspergillus section Flavi (4.7-78.3%), Aspergillus
section Nigri (9.4-52.6%) and Aspergillus section Circumdati (5.1-30.9%). In the
in-shell peanut samples the lowest populations were recorded in El-Beheira and
Asyut (3.7-4.0 log10 CFU g-1) and the highest in Alexandria and Elsharqiya (4.1-
6.0 log10 CFU g-1). Aspergillus section Flavi and section Nigri were the most
dominant and Aspergillus section Circumdati were only found in samples in 2008.
Both qualitative (coconut cream agar) and quantitative analyses (HPLC) were used
to analyse the potential mycotoxin production by strains isolated from peanuts.
Of a total of 88 Aspergillus section Flavi strains examined, 95% were A. flavus
based on production of aflatoxin B1 on YES medium and confirmation using
molecular analyses. Of 64 Aspergillus section Circumdati strains only 28%
produced ochratoxin A (OTA), and were identified as A. westerdijkiae. No
Aspergillus section Nigri strains produced OTA, and they were identified as A.
niger (uniseriate). The presence of these toxigenic fungi indicates that there
is a potential risk of mycotoxin contamination in Egyptian peanuts and suggests
that problems can arise from contamination with both aflatoxins, and perhaps
also OTA.