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Effect of wheat species (Triticum aestivum vs T. spelta), farming system (organic vs conventional) and flour type (wholegrain vs white) on composition of wheat flour; results of a retail survey in the UK and Germany – 1. Mycotoxin content

journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-15, 14:21 authored by Juan Wang, et al., Leonidas RempelosLeonidas Rempelos
<p>Wheat is one of the main dietary sources for mycotoxins that can cause adverse health effects in humans. Here we report results of a 3-year survey which compared the effects of flour type (whole-grain vs white), wheat species (common vs spelt), and farming system (organic vs conventional) on mycotoxin concentrations in UK and German wheat flour brands. Wholegrain, conventional and organic flour contained 124, 31 and 9% higher concentrations of T-2/HT-2, DON and ZEA respectively, but concentrations of the three <em>Fusarium</em> mycotoxins assessed were ~10 times lower than the EC-maximum contamination levels (MCL). Thirty one percent of flour samples had <a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/agricultural-and-biological-sciences/ochratoxin" target="_blank"><u>Ochratoxin A</u></a> (OTA) concentrations above the MCL (3 µg/kg), but OTA levels were no affected by wheat species, farming system and flour type. Results suggest that both organic and conventional primary production methods and postharvest quality assurance systems are effective for maintaining <em>Fusarium</em> mycotoxins, but not OTA concentrations, below the MCL. </p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Agri-Food Technology and Manufacturing (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Food Chemistry

Volume

327

Publisher

Elsevier

Date Accepted

2020-05-06

Date of First Publication

2020-05-11

Date of Final Publication

2020-10-15

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A

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