| Literature DB >> 26274974 |
Antonio Gallo1, Gianluca Giuberti2, Jens C Frisvad3, Terenzio Bertuzzi4, Kristian F Nielsen5.
Abstract
Ruminant diets include cereals, protein feeds, their by-products as well as hay and grass, grass/legume, whole-crop maize, small grain or sorghum silages. Furthermore, ruminants are annually or seasonally fed with grazed forage in many parts of the World. All these forages could be contaminated by several exometabolites of mycotoxigenic fungi that increase and diversify the risk of mycotoxin exposure in ruminants compared to swine and poultry that have less varied diets. Evidence suggests the greatest exposure for ruminants to some regulated mycotoxins (aflatoxins, trichothecenes, ochratoxin A, fumonisins and zearalenone) and to many other secondary metabolites produced by different species of Alternaria spp. (e.g., AAL toxins, alternariols, tenuazonic acid or 4Z-infectopyrone), Aspergillus flavus (e.g., kojic acid, cyclopiazonic acid or β-nitropropionic acid), Aspergillus fuminatus (e.g., gliotoxin, agroclavine, festuclavines or fumagillin), Penicillium roqueforti and P. paneum (e.g., mycophenolic acid, roquefortines, PR toxin or marcfortines) or Monascus ruber (citrinin and monacolins) could be mainly related to forage contamination. This review includes the knowledge of mycotoxin occurrence reported in the last 15 years, with special emphasis on mycotoxins detected in forages, and animal toxicological issues due to their ingestion. Strategies for preventing the problem of mycotoxin feed contamination under farm conditions are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: dairy cow; hay; heifers; mycotoxins; ruminants; silage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26274974 PMCID: PMC4549740 DOI: 10.3390/toxins7083057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Number of Scopus database citations for several secondary metabolites produced by mycotoxigenic fungi and their scientific interests.
| Secondary Metabolites | Scopus Citation | Scientific Interest a | Secondary Metabolites | Scopus Citation | Scientific Interest a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAL toxin | 100 | ** | Infectopyrones | 3 | * |
| Aflatoxins | 16,939 | ***** | Islanditoxin | 10 | * |
| Aflavinine | 12 | * | Luteoskyrin | 135 | ** |
| Agroclavine | 214 | *** | Marcfortine A, B and C | 38 | * |
| Alternariol | 396 | **** | Monacolins | 242 | *** |
| Andrastins | 30 | * | Moniliformin | 399 | **** |
| Aspergillic acid | 66 | * | Monoacetoxyscirpenol | 64 | * |
| Aurofusarin | 55 | * | Mycophenolic acid | 241 | *** |
| Beauvericin | 441 | **** | Neosolaniol | 242 | *** |
| β-nitropropionic acids | 4 | * | Nivalenol | 1014 | ***** |
| Botryodiploidin | 36 | * | Novae-zelandins | 1 | * |
| Butenolide | 1337 | ***** | Ochratoxins | 5162 | ***** |
| Byssochlamic acid | 31 | * | Oosporein | 45 | * |
| Chlamydosporol | 21 | * | Orsellinic acid | 205 | *** |
| Chrysogine | 18 | * | Paspalitrems | 7 | * |
| Citreoviridin | 124 | ** | Patulin | 1606 | ***** |
| Citrinin | 1994 | ***** | Penicillic acid | 437 | **** |
| Citreoisocoumarin | 9 | * | Penitrem | 202 | *** |
| Clavine alkaloids | 146 | ** | Phomopsin | 123 | ** |
| Culmorin | 33 | * | PR toxin | 320 | **** |
| Cyclopiazonic Acid | 2307 | ***** | PR-amide | 6 | * |
| Deoxynivalenol | 3720 | ***** | PR-imine | 5 | * |
| Diacetoxyscirpenol | 759 | **** | Pseurotins | 56 | * |
| Dicoumarol | 3811 | ***** | Roquefortines | 213 | *** |
| Diketopioperazines | 1 | * | Roridins | 32 | * |
| Eremofortin C | 10 | * | Rubratoxin | 191 | ** |
| Ergot toxins | 7567 | ***** | Rubrofusarin | 75 | * |
| Ergotamine | 7298 | ***** | Scirpentriol | 69 | * |
| Festuclavine | 74 | * | Slaframine | 103 | ** |
| Fumagillin | 939 | **** | Sphingofungin | 47 | * |
| Fumigatins | 23 | * | Sporidesmin | 207 | *** |
| Fumiquinazolines | 56 | * | Stachbotryotoxins | 1 | * |
| Fumitremorgen | 11 | * | Sterigmatocystin | 1000 | **** |
| Fumitremorgines | 357 | **** | T-2 & HT-2 toxin | 470 | **** |
| Fumonisins | 3542 | ***** | Tentoxin | 208 | *** |
| Fusarenone-X | 54 | * | Tenuazonic acid | 256 | *** |
| Fusaric Acid | 675 | **** | Tremorgens | 37 | * |
| Fusarins | 100 | ** | Tremorgens | 46 | * |
| Fusariocin | 2 | * | Trypacidin | 20 | * |
| Gliotoxin | 996 | **** | Verruculogen | 112 | ** |
| Helvolic acid | 89 | ** | Zearalenone | 3443 | ***** |
a: The scientific interest associated to each secondary metabolite was assigned on the basis of number of Scopus citations obtained by using “Article title, Abstract, Keywords” document search criterion; *: for 1–99 citations; **: for 100–199 citations; ***: 200–299 citations; ****: 300–999 citations; *****: >1000 citations.
Figure 1Number of Scopus database citations obtained by searching the keywords “Mycotoxins & Cereals” or “Mycotoxins & Forages”.
Survey of mycotoxins detected in forages and other fibrous feeds from the literature.
| Forage Products | Mycotoxins a | Number of Samples | Incidence (%) | Mean (Excluding not Detectable Data when Possible) | Range or Maximal Detected Value | Nation | References | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Different feeds | AAL TA toxin | 63 | 97% | 560 μg/kg | 90–1470 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| MS | AAL TA toxin | 60 | ~30% | 170 μg/kg | 200–2010 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | |
| Hay and hay silage | AAL TA toxin | 25 | 100% | 720 μg/kg | 290–1160 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| MS | AAL TB toxin | 60 | ~15% | 50 μg/kg | 30–900 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | |
| MS | Alternariol | 82 | 2% | 18 μg/kg | max 24 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | Alternariol ME | 82 | 2% | 8 μg/kg | max 8.8 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | AFB1 | 1 | - | 28 μg/kg | France | [ | ||
| MS | AFB1 | 100 | 92% | - | 0.6– > 4 μg/kg | Italy | [ | only core samples |
| MS | AFB1 | 116 | 13% | 33 μg/kg | 2–54 μg/kg | Brazil | [ | core samples |
| MS | AFB1 | 9 | - | - | 4–34 μg/kg | France | [ | from 1 farm |
| Silages | β-nitropropionic acid | 3 | 33% | 1360 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | |
| Different feeds | Cyclopiazonic acid | 63 | 87% | 340 μg/kg | 120–1820 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Hay and hay silage | Cyclopiazonic acid | 25 | 80% | 390 μg/kg | 120–1820 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| MS | Cyclopiazonic acid | 120 | 37% | 120 μg/kg | 20–1430 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | 4 samples from 30 bunkers |
| Silages | Cyclopiazonic acid | 3 | 33% | 55 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | |
| MS | Gliotoxin | 1 | - | 4 μg/kg | France | [ | ||
| MS | Gliotoxin | 90 | - | 5130 μg/kg | 5100–6500 μg/kg | Argentina | [ | |
| Silages | Gliotoxin | 3 | 33% | 1870 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | |
| MS | Gliotoxin | 196 | <1% | 140 μg/kg | max 600 μg/kg | Italy | [ | 3 samples from 68 silos |
| MS | 15-acetyl DON | 140 | <1% | 901 μg/kg | max 1013 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| MS | 15-acetyl DON | 5 | 100% | 59 μg/kg | max 127 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | 3-acetyl DON | 20 | 0% | - | - | Denmark | [ | |
| Hays | 3-acetyl DON | 28 | 4% | 20 μg/kg | - | Germany | [ | |
| MS | 3-&5-acetyl DON | 19 | 21% | 217 μg/kg | 135–300 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| Different feeds | DON | 63 | 100% | 730 μg/kg | 340–6020 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Compound feed | DON | 72 | 54% | 433 μg/kg | max 2408 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| MS | DON | 20 | 100% | 1056 μg/kg | 160–5094 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | DON | 140 | 72% | 854 μg/kg | max 3142 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| MS | DON | 82 | 6% | 1629 μg/kg | max 2974 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| MS | DON | 1 | - | 146 μg/kg | - | France | [ | |
| MS | DON | 196 | 8% | 280 μg/kg | max 560 μg/kg | Italy | [ | 3 samples from 68 silos |
| MS | DON | 9 | - | - | 100–213 μg/kg | France | [ | from 1 farm |
| MS | DON | 5 | 100% | 2919 μg/kg | max 3944 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | DON | 19 | 100% | 1356 μg/kg | 780–2990 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| MS | DON | 116 | 24% | 1610 μg/kg | 150–3420 μg/kg | Brazil | [ | core samples |
| Silages | DON | 3 | 100% | 396 μg/kg | max 761 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Ensiled by-products | DON | 29 | 0% | - | - | Netherlands | [ | |
| Feed commodities | DON | 8 | 38% | 1019 μg/kg | max 1811 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Forage products | DON | 13 | 15% | 348 μg/kg | max 489 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Hay and hay silage | DON | 25 | 100% | 610 μg/kg | 510–720 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Hays | DON | 28 | 14% | 41 μg/kg | max 69 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| Silage | DON | 47 | 53% | 550 μg/kg | max 1250 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| SGS (Wheat) | DON | 30 | 10% | 621 μg/kg | max 1165 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over two years |
| MS | DON 2000 | 196 | 59% | 1290 μg/kg DM | 240–12,890 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | ELISA method |
| MS | DON 2002 | 182 | 89% | 2100 μg/kg DM | 260–14,290 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | ELISA method |
| MS | DON 2001 | 32 | 86% | 800 μg/kg | max 3700 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | over two years |
| MS | DON 2002 | 39 | 66% | 1100 μg/kg | max 5100 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | over two years |
| MS | Fusarenon X | 20 | 20% | 4 μg/kg | 8–14 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | Nivalenol | 5 | 100% | 1612 μg/kg | max 2809 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | Nivalenol | 19 | 42% | 521 μg/kg | 190–760 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| Hays | Nivalenol | 28 | 4% | 131 μg/kg | max 222 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | Nivalenol | 82 | 13% | 266 μg/kg | max 758 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| MS | 15monoacetoxyscirpenol | 5 | 60% | 30 μg/kg | max 49 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | HT-2 toxin | 20 | 60% | 104 μg/kg | 2–327 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | HT-2 toxin | 5 | 100% | 18 μg/kg | max 26 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | HT-2 toxin | 19 | 26% | 95 μg/kg | 76–120 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| MS | T-2 toxin | 20 | 5% | 2 μg/kg | - | Denmark | [ | |
| MS | T-2 toxin | 19 | 42% | 36 μg/kg | 14–84 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| Different feeds | FB1 | 63 | 37% | 280 μg/kg | 20–2120 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| MS | FB1 | 140 | 1% | 17,000 μg/kg | max 26,200 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| MS | FB1 | 86 | 97% | 615 μg/kg | 21–1824 μg/kg | IL, US | [ | |
| MS | FB1 | 60 | ~75% | 2020 μg/kg | 200–10,100 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | |
| MS | FB1 | 116 | 15% | 5440 μg/kg | 300–3400 μg/kg | Brazil | [ | core samples |
| MS | FB1 | 100 | 88% | - | 900– > 10,000 μg/kg | Italy | [ | only core samples |
| Hay and hay silage | FB1 | 25 | 52% | 120 μg/kg | 20–450 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Silages | FB1 | 3 | 33% | 21 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | |
| MS | FB2 | 64 | 72% | 93 μg/kg | 21–276 μg/kg | IL, US | [ | |
| MS | FB2 | 60 | ~40% | 980 μg/kg | 200–20,300 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | |
| MS | FB3 | 51 | 57% | 51 μg/kg | 16–161 μg/kg | IL, US | [ | |
| GS (bunkers) | Beauvericin | 88 | - | ~30 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Beauvericin | 56 | - | ~30 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Enniatin A1 | 6 | - | ~120 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (bunkers) | Enniatin A1 | 88 | - | ~40 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (bunkers) | Enniatin A1 | 88 | - | ~20 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Enniatin A1 | 56 | - | ~25 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Enniatin B | 82 | 24% | 53 μg/kg | max 152 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | |
| GS (bunkers) | Enniatin B | 88 | - | ~60 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Enniatin B | 56 | - | ~250 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Enniatin B1 | 6 | - | ~160 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (bunkers) | Enniatin B1 | 88 | - | ~180 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Enniatin B1 | 56 | - | ~80 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | α-ZOL | 5 | 20% | 15 μg/kg | - | Germany | [ | |
| MS | β-ZOL | 5 | 20% | 116 μg/kg | - | Germany | [ | |
| Different feeds | ZEA | 63 | 32% | 220 μg/kg | 120–310 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Compound feed | ZEA | 28% | 80 μg/kg | max 363 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| MS | ZEA | 140 | 49% | 174 μg/kg | max 943 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| MS | ZEA | 82 | 28% | 66 μg/kg | max 311 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| MS | ZEA | 9 | - | - | 23–41 μg/kg | France | [ | from 1 farm |
| MS | ZEA | 5 | 100% | 432 μg/kg | max 1790 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | ZEA | 19 | 79% | 180 μg/kg | 83–430 μg/kg | Switzerland | [ | |
| MS | ZEA | 85 | 15% | - | >50 μg/kg | Italy | [ | |
| MS | ZEA | 100 | 60% | - | 30–>300 μg/kg | Italy | [ | only core samples |
| Silages | ZEA | 3 | 100% | 145 μg/kg | max 240 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Ensiled by-products | ZEA | - | - | - | Netherlands | [ | ||
| Feed commodities | ZEA | 38% | 80 μg/kg | max 108 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| Forage products | ZEA | 8% | 82 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | ||
| GS | ZEA | 120 | 6% | 936 μg/kg | max 308 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| Hay and hay silage | ZEA | 25 | 0% | - | - | WI, US | [ | |
| Hays | ZEA | 28 | 43% | 24 μg/kg | max 115 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| Hays | ZEA | 44 | 21% | - | - | Ireland | [ | |
| Haylages | ZEA | 40 | 8% | - | - | Ireland | [ | |
| Hays | ZEA | 65 | 8% | - | - | Canada | [ | |
| Silage | ZEA | 17% | 125 μg/kg | max 273 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| Different feeds | PR toxin | 63 | 76% | 130 μg/kg | 50–260 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| Hay and hay silage | PR toxin | 25 | 80% | 15 μg/kg | 50–260 μg/kg | WI, US | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | 16-OH-roquefortine C | 5 | 20% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Andrastin A | 82 | 18% | 169 μg/kg | max 691 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| GS (round bale) | Andrastin A | 56 | - | ~500 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Andrastin A | 5 | 100% | - | range trace-20,000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Citreoisocoumarin | 82 | 8% | - | - | Denmark | [ | Qualitative analysis |
| GS (round bale) | Citreoisocuomarin | 5 | 40% | - | trace | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Marcfortine A | 82 | 7% | - | - | Denmark | [ | Qualitative analysis |
| GS (round bale) | Marcfortine A | 5 | 60% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Marcfortine B | 82 | 1% | Denmark | [ | Qualitative analysis | ||
| GS (round bale) | Agroclavine | 5 | 40% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | from |
| GS (round bale) | Festuclavine | 5 | 40% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | from |
| MS | Mycophenolic Acid | 135 | 28% | 690 μg/kg | 20–23,000 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | Mycophenolic acid | 120 | 42% | 160 μg/kg | 20–1300 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | 4 samples from 30 bunkers |
| MS | Mycophenolic acid | 82 | 2% | 8 μg/kg | max 8.8 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| MS | Mycophenolic Acid | 196 | 8% | 1760 μg/kg | max 48,000 μg/kg | Italy | [ | Three samples from 68 silos |
| Silages | Mycophenolic Acid | 3 | 100% | 4244 μg/kg | max 7565 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Ensiled by-products | Mycophenolic acid | 10% | 66 μg/kg | max 83 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| GS (bunkers) | Mycophenolic Acid | 88 | - | ~250 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Mycophenolic Acid | 56 | - | ~1250 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS | Mycophenolic Acid | 98 | 37% | 2200 μg/kg | 20–35,000 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Mycophenolic acid | 5 | 100% | - | range trace-20,000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| Silage | Mycophenolic acid | 13% | 524 μg/kg | max 2630 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| MS | Roquefortine C | 12 | 8% | 200 μg/kg DM | - | Germany | [ | molded silages |
| MS | Roquefortine C | 12 | 100% | 17,000 μg/kg DM | 700–36,000 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | unmolded samples |
| MS | Roquefortine C | 60 | 30% | 5470 μg/kg | 50–28,000 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | data of Armbruster, 1994 |
| MS | Roquefortine C | 120 | 60% | 380 μg/kg | 10–5710 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | 4 samples from 30 bunkers |
| MS | Roquefortine C | 82 | 2% | 173 μg/kg | max 189 μg/kg | Denmark | [ | Quantitative analysis |
| MS | Roquefortine C | 196 | 5% | 740 μg/kg | max 32,000 μg/kg | Italy | [ | 3 samples from 68 silos |
| Ensiled by-products | Roquefortine C | 7% | 123 μg/kg | max 170 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| GS (bunkers) | Roquefortine C | 88 | - | ~500 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Roquefortine C | 56 | - | ~280 μg/kg DM | - | Ireland | [ | |
| GS | Roquefortine C | 24 | 13% | - | range 10–580 μg/kg | Germany | [ | From Ambruster, 2008 PhD thesis |
| GS | Roquefortine C | 20 | 15% | 280 μg/kg | range 10–580 μg/kg | Germany | [ | From Ambruster, 2008 PhD thesis |
| GS | Roquefortine C | 120 | <1% | 81 μg/kg | - | Netherlands | [ | over three years |
| GS (round bale) | Roquefortine C | 5 | 40% | - | range 1000–20,000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| Silage | Roquefortine C | 19% | 778 μg/kg | max 3160 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | ||
| GS (wilted) | Roquefortine C | 12 | 75% | 200 μg/kg DM | 100–300 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | molded silages |
| GS (wilted) | Roquefortine C | 12 | 42% | 600 μg/kg DM | 200–15,000 μg/kg DM | Germany | [ | unmolded samples |
| MS | Roquefortine A | 82 | 11% | - | - | Denmark | [ | Qualitative analysis |
| GS (round bale) | Roquefortine A | 5 | 40% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Roquefortine B | 5 | 40% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| GS (round bale) | Roquefortine D | 5 | 40% | - | range 100–1000 μg/kg | Ireland | [ | |
| MS | Patulin | 120 | 23% | 80 μg/kg | 10–1210 μg/kg | PA, US | [ | 4 samples from 30 bunkers |
| Silages | Patulin | 3 | 100% | 153 μg/kg | max 211 μg/kg | Netherlands | [ | |
| Silages | Monacolin KB | 233 | 21% | 6161 μg/kg | 28–65,400 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| Silages | Monacolin KL | 233 | 19% | 1767 μg/kg | 25–15,600 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
| MS | Citrinin | 1 | - | 12 μg/kg | France | [ | ||
| MS | Citrinin | 9 | 4–25 μg/kg | France | [ | from 1 farm | ||
| Silages | Citrinin | 233 | 6% | 9 μg/kg | 2–64 μg/kg | Germany | [ | |
a: AAL TA toxin, Alternaria alternata toxins type A; AAL TB toxin, Alternaria alternata toxins type A; aflatoxin B1, AFB1; Alternariol ME, alternariol monomethyl ether; deoxynivalenol, DON; fumonisin B1, FB1; fumonisin B2, FB2; fumonisin B3, FB3; grass silage, GS; whole-crop forage maize silage, MS; ochratoxin A, OTA; whole-crop small grain cereal silage, SGS; α-zearalenol, α-ZOL; β-Zearalenol, β-ZOL; zearalenone, ZEA.
Survey of mycotoxins not detected in forages from the literature.
| Forage Products | Mycotoxins a not Detected | References |
|---|---|---|
| MS | AFB1, AFB2, AFG1, AFG2, 3-acetyl-DON, DAS, ergotamin, FB2, fusarenon-X, OTA, mycophenolic acid, penicillic acid, roquefortin C, sterigmatocystin, T-2 toxin, HT-2 toxin | [ |
| MS | AFB1, AFB2, AFG1, AFG2, OTA, T-2 toxin, HT-2 toxin, 3-acetyl-DON, 15-acetyl-DON, DAS, sterigmatocystin, fusarenon-X, ergotamine, penicillic acid | [ |
| MS | Cyclopiazonic acid, fumitremorgin A, gliotoxin, OTA, patulin, penitrem A, sterigmatocystin, T-2 toxin, tenuazonic acid, altersetin, fumigaclavine A, fumigaclavine C, PR toxin | [ |
| MS | ZEA, PR toxin | [ |
| MS | 3-acetyldeoxynivalenol, DAS, fusarenon-X, T-2 toxin, HT-2 toxin, neosolaniol, scirpentriol | [ |
| Hays | 15-monoacetoxyscirpenol, 15-acetyldeoxynivealenol, DAS, fusarenon-X, T-2 toxin, neosolaniol, scirpentriol, α-ZOL, β-ZOL | [ |
| MS | FB1, OTA, ZEA | [ |
| MS | Gliotoxin, OTA | [ |
| Hays and haylages | FBs, AFs, T-2 toxin, OTA | [ |
a: aflatoxin B1, AFB1; aflatoxin B2, AFB2; aflatoxin G1, AFG1; aflatoxin G2, AFG2; deoxynivalenol, DON; diacetoxyscirpenol, DAS; fumonisin B1, FB1; fumonisin B2, FB2; fumonisins, FBs; whole-crop forage maize silage, MS; ochratoxin A, OTA; α-zearalenol, α-ZOL; β-Zearalenol, β-ZOL; zearalenone, ZEA.
Survey on the effects of mycotoxins on rumen microbiota tested by in vitro approaches from literatures.
| Mycotoxins a | Media | Tested Dosages | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFB1 | rumen fluid | 0, 300, 600, 900 ng AFB1/mL buffered rumen fluid | ↓ gas production, ↓ dry matter digestibility, ↓ NH3-N concentrations | [ |
| AFB1 | rumen fluid | 1, 10 μg AFB1/mL buffered rumen fluid | ↓ dry matter digestibility | [ |
| AFB1 | rumen fluid | 9.5 ng AFB1/mL buffered rumen fluid | no effects | [ |
| AFB1 | rumen fluid | 0, 320, 640, 960 ng AFB1/mL buffered rumen fluid | ↓ final gas production, ↓ rate of degradation, ↓ NH3-N concentrations, ↑ isobutyrate, valerate and isovalerate molar proportions | [ |
| DON | rumen fluid | 0.36/0.46 or 5.76/6.90 mg of DON/kg diet | None, expect ↓ NDF digestibility | [ |
| DON | rumen fluid | 0.3 or 3.4/4.4 mg of DON/kg diet | None, expect ↓ NDF digestibility | [ |
| DON | rumen fluid | 40 μg DON/mL of rumen fluid | ↓ gas production, ↓ VFA and NH3-N concentrations | [ |
| DON and fusaric acid | culture media | antimicrobial activity of fusaric acid against | [ | |
| Gliotoxin | rumen fluid | 0, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 μg/mL buffered rumen fluid | < 80 μg/mL no effects. At 80 μg/mL ↓ DM degradation, gas and VFA productions | [ |
| FB1 | rumen fluid | 0, 50 or 100 mg/kg rumen fluid | none | [ |
| OTA | rumen fluid | 200 μg of OTA/l of rumen fluid | none | [ |
| Patulin | rumen fluid | 20, 100 and 300 μg of Patulin/mL rumen liquid | ↓ Acetic acid production within 4 h and Inhibition of protein synthesis | [ |
| Patulin | rumen fluid | 0, 10, 20 and 40 mg of Patulin/mL rumen fluid | ↓ dDM, VFA production, dNDF, dADF, dCHO, dCP and bacterial N flows ↑ NH3-N | [ |
| Mycopenolic acid, Roquefortine C and PR toxin | rumen fluid | 0.01, 0.30, 1.01, 1.71 and 2.00 μg of each mycotoxin/mL buffered rumen fluid | Mychopenolic acid and roquefortine C ↓ gas production, VFA production. No effect of PR toxin | [ |
| Citrinin, Monacolin K, Pravastatin and Mevastatin | rumen fluid | 5 or 20 μg of monacolin/mL rumen fluid; 5 or 20 μg of citrinin/mL rumen fluid; | none, ↓Methane production | [ |
a: aflatoxin B1, AFB1; ammonia nitrogen, NH3-N; dADF, digestible ADF; dCHO; digestible carbohydrates; dDM, digestible dry matter; deoxynivalenol, DON; DM, dry matter; dNDF, digestible NDF; fumonisin B1, FB1; ochratoxin A, OTA; VFA, Volatile fatty acids.
Survey on the effects of mycotoxins ingestion in ruminants from literatures (Field trial or FT and Experimental trial or ET).
| Mycotoxins a | Study | Animals | Tested Dosages | Reported Effects | References | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFB1 | FT | Beef | 0.2, 0.4, 0.6 or 0.8 mg of AFB1/kg of BW | ↓ rumen mobility | [ | |
| AFB1 | FT | Beef | 0, 100, 300, 700 and 1000 μg AFB1/kg diet | For levels 700 and 1000 μg/kg: Growth inhibition, ↓ feed efficiencies, ↑ liver and kidney weights | [ | |
| AFB1 | FT | Lactating dairy cows | 20 μg AFB1/kg diet | ↓ feed consumption, ↓ milk production | [ | |
| AFB1 | FT | Lactating dairy cows | 120 μg AFB1/kg diet | ↓ reproductive efficiency, ↓ milk production | [ | |
| AFB1 | FT | Lactating dairy cows | 100 μg AFB1/kg diet | ↓ milk production | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 100 and 300 μg of AFB1/kg of BW | ↓ feed intake → ↓ milk production | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 13 mg of AFB1 (pure and impure from | ↓ milk production | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Sheep | 1.8 and 2.4 mg of AFB1/kg diet | none | [ | Exposition period of 5 years |
| AFB1 | FT | Sheep | 0.75 mg of AFB1/kg diet | Inappetence, apathy, hepatic lesion, neurological signs and death. | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lambs | 2.6 mg of AFB1/kg diet | ↓ BW ↑ AST, GGT, prothrombin time, cholesterol, uric acid and triglyceride values ↓ albumin, glucose and urea nitrogen and urea-to-creatine ratio | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lambs | 2 mg of AFB1/kg diet | = BW ↓ ADG, immune response | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lambs | 350 μg AFB1/kg diet | = ADI and blood parameters ↓ ADG gain, serum Ca and P | [ | Exposition period of 150 days |
| AFB1 | ET | Lambs | 0, 5.9, 11.8, 17.7, 23.5 μg AFB1/kg diet | = DMI, cellular immunity ↓ ADW | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lambs | 2.5 mg of AFB1/kg diet | ↓ feed intakes, daily gain, and gain/feed ↑ AST, GGT, total protein, cholesterol | [ | |
| AFB1 | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 96 μg/cow/day | slightly ↑ GGT and serum protein | [ | |
| AFB1&FB1+FB2 | ET | Heifers | C (1.9 μg of AFB1 and 3.8 mg of FBs/kg diet), A (12.0 μg of AFB1 and 6.6 mg of FBs/kg diet), A-F (19.9 μg of AFB1 and 23.2 mg of FBs/kg diet) diets | = BW, DMI ↑GGT delay in reproductive career | [ | |
| AFB1, DON, ZEA, FB1, OTA, T-2 toxin | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 38 AFB1 and 270 T-2 μg/kg; 720 DON, 701 FB1, 541 ZEA, 501 OTA mg/kg | ↓ DMI, milk yield, CP and NDF digestibilities, impact on haematological parameters and immunosuppression | [ | |
| Maltoryzine | Lactating dairy cows | unknown | general poison | [ | ||
| β-nitropropionic acid | Sheep and Cattle | unknown | emphysema and difficulty in locomotion | [ | ||
| DON | ET | Lactating and no lactating dairy cows | 0.3 or 3.4/4.4 mg of DON/kg diet | ↓ NDF digestibility and slightly ↓ in microbial crude protein | [ | Two level of F:C ratio, being 40:60 or 70:30 |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 4.4 or 5.3 mg DON/kg DM | ↑ DMI ↓ Milk Fat | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 4.4 or 5.3 mg DON/kg DM | ↑ valerate ↓ pH, acetate and isobutyrate | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 0.59, 42, and 104 mg of DON/cow/day | none | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 8 mg of DON/kg diet | none | [ | |
| DON | ET | Non lactating cows | about 8 or 35 mg of DON/cow/day | none, except slightly ↓ ingestion of contaminated feed | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 66 mg of DON/kg diet | none | [ | |
| DON | ET | Non lactating cows | 4 or 3.6 mg of DON/kg diet and 0.13 or 0.05 mg of ZEA/kg in experiments 1 and 2, respectively | = rumen pH and VFA production ↓ microbial protein and ↑rumen NH3-N concentration and | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 3.5 mg of DON/kg diet and 0.24 mg of ZEA/kg diet | = DMI and milk production; Influence on metabolic parameters and immune response | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | Group CON (0.02 mg ZEA and 0.07 mg DON/ kg DM), group FUS-50 (0.33 mg ZEA and 2.62 mg DON/kg DM), group FUS-100 (0.66 mg ZEA and 5.24 mg DON/ kg DM) | none | [ | |
| DON | ET | Lactating dairy cows | The average daily intake of DON in group K was 12.4 mg, in group T 14.1 mg and in group M 14.3 mg and ZEA in group K was 12.4 mg, in group T 0.67 mg and in group M 0.68 mg | slightly ↑ in AST and LDH | [ | |
| AFB1 & DAS | ET | Lambs | Group control (uncontaminated), group AFB1-contaminated (2.5 mg /kg), group DAS-contaminated (5 mg/kg from chemical standard) and group AFB1/DAS co-contaminated (2.5 mg of AFB1 and 5 mg of diet/kg) diets | ↓ Feed ingestion, BW | [ | |
| FBs | ET | Lactating dairy cows | 75 mg of FBs/kg and 3 mg FB1/kg BW | none | [ | |
| FB1 | ET | Steers | 94 mg FB1/kg diet | ↑ AST, GGT, hepatocellular injury and biliary epithelial hyperplasia | [ | Exposition period of 253 days |
| FBs | ET | Claves | 15, 31 or 148 mg FBs/kg diet | = Feed ingestion, BW ↑AST, GGT, LDH, bilirubin and cholesterol | [ | |
| FB1 | ET | Milk-fed calves | 1 mg of FB1/kg BW intravenous administered | Liver and kidney lesions ↑ serum AST, ALP, GGT and sorbitol dehydrogenase | [ | |
| FBs | ET | Lambs | 0, 11.1, 22.2 or 45.5 mg of FBs/kg BW | Death, ↑ alkaline phosphatase, GGT, AST, cholesterol, triglyceride, urea nitrogen and creatinine | [ | |
| ZEA | ET | Heifers | 250 mg ZEA/heifer | ↓ Conception rate, no other effects | [ | |
| ZEA | ET | Dairy cow | from 0 to 500 mg ZEA/cow | None | [ | |
| DON & ZEA | FT | Heifers | About 500 μg of DON/kg diet and 750 μg of ZEA/kg diet | unsynchronized ovarian cycles, vaginitis and early development of mammary gland in the prepubertal heifers | [ | |
| ZEA | ET | Ewes | 1.5, 3, 6, 12, or 24 mg ZEA/ewe | reproductive disorders, lower lambing percentages and infertility. | [ | |
| OTA | ET | Sheep | 0, 1.4, or 3.5 mg of OTA/kg diet | =feed intake and nutrient utilization | [ | |
| OTA | ET | Sheep | 14 mg of OTA/kg diet | ↓ feed intake | [ | Preliminary ET |
| Mychopenolic acid | ET | Sheep (male) | 0, 10, 70, 300 mg of MPA/sheep/day | none | [ | |
| Mychopenolic acid | ET | Sheep | 300 mg of MPA/sheep/day | Slightly signs of immunosuppression in jejunum, white blood cells, ileum | [ | |
| Mychopenolic acid | ET | Sheep | 300 mg of MPA/sheep/day | none | [ | |
| Roquefortine C | FT | Cow | about 4–8 mg of RC/kg diet | Reversible paralytic effects | [ | |
| Roquefortine C | ET | Sheep | 0, 10 and 50 mg of RC/sheep/day | None ↓ rumen pH | [ | |
| Citrinin | FT | Sheep | Presence of visible moldy feeds in diets contaminated by both citrinin (2–10 mg/kg) and OTA (0–20 mg/kg) | fever, diarrhea and uraemia | [ | |
| Citrinin, monacolin K, pravastatin and mevastatin | ET | Sheep | None ↓ rumen methane production | [ | ||
| Patulin | FT | Beef | Suspected Patulin | neurotoxicosis, comprising tremors, ataxia, paresis, recumbency and death | [ |
a: aflatoxin B1, AFB1; ammonia nitrogen, NH3-N; average daily gain, ADG; average daily intake, ADI; average daily weight, ADW; aspartate aminotransferase, AST; body weight, BW; deoxynivalenol, DON; diacetoxyscirpenol, DAS; dry matter intake, DMI; dry matter, DM; forage to concentrate ratio, F:C; fumonisin B1, FB1; fumonisin B2, FB2; γ-glutamyltransferase, GGT; lactate dehydrogenase, LDH; Mychopenolic acid, MPA; ochratoxin A, OTA; Roquefortine C, RC; volatile fatty acids, VFA; zearalenone, ZEA.