| Literature DB >> 27886128 |
Abstract
The purpose of this review is to present information about raw materials that can be used in pig and poultry diets and the factors responsible for variations in their mycotoxin contents. The levels of mycotoxins in pig and poultry feeds are calculated based on mycotoxin contamination levels of the raw materials with different diet formulations, to highlight the important role the stage of production and the raw materials used can have on mycotoxins levels in diets. Our analysis focuses on mycotoxins for which maximum tolerated levels or regulatory guidelines exist, and for which sufficient contamination data are available. Raw materials used in feed formulation vary considerably depending on the species of animal, and the stage of production. Mycotoxins are secondary fungal metabolites whose frequency and levels also vary considerably depending on the raw materials used and on the geographic location where they were produced. Although several reviews of existing data and of the literature on worldwide mycotoxin contamination of food and feed are available, the impact of the different raw materials used on feed formulation has not been widely studied.Entities:
Keywords: diet; exposure; feed; feed substitution; mycotoxin; pig; poultry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27886128 PMCID: PMC5198545 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8120350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
European Union regulatory levels a and established guidelines b on mycotoxins in raw materials and in pig and poultry diets [2,3,4].
| Mycotoxin | Feed Materials | Maximum Levels, µg/kg |
|---|---|---|
| a Aflatoxin B1 | All feed materials | 20 |
| Complete feedstuffs for pigs and poultry (except young animals) | 20 | |
| Other complete feedstuffs | 10 | |
| Complementary feedstuffs for pigs and poultry (except young animals) | 20 | |
| Other complementary feedstuffs | 5 | |
| b Deoxynivalenol | Feed materials | - |
| Cereals and cereal products with the exception of maize by-products | 8000 | |
| Maize by-products | 12,000 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs with the exception of: | 5000 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for pigs | 900 | |
| b Zearalenone | Feed materials | - |
| Cereals and cereal products with the exception of maize by-products | 2000 | |
| Maize byproducts | 3000 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs | - | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for piglets and gilts (young sows) | 100 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for sows and fattening pigs | 250 | |
| b Ochratoxin A | Feed materials | - |
| Cereals and cereal products | 250 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs | - | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for pigs | 50 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for poultry | 100 | |
| b Fumonisin B1 + B2 | Feed materials | - |
| Maize and maize products | 60,000 | |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs for: | - | |
| Pigs | 5000 | |
| Poultry | 20,000 | |
| b Sum T-2 and HT-2 toxin | Cereal products for feed and compound feed | - |
| Oat milling products (husks) | 2000 | |
| Other cereal products | 500 | |
| Compound feed | 250 |
Food drug administration mycotoxin regulatory guidance in pig and poultry diets [5].
| Mycotoxin | Intended Use/Class of Animal | Grain, Grain by-Product, Feed or Other Products | Maximum Levels, µg/kg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aflatoxin B1 | Immature animals | Maize, peanut products, and other animal feeds and ingredients, excluding cottonseed meal | 20 |
| Animals not listed above, or unknown use | Maize, peanut products, cottonseed, and other animal feeds and ingredients | 20 | |
| Breeding swine and mature poultry | Maize and peanut products | 100 | |
| Finishing swine 100 pounds or greater in weight | Maize and peanut products | 200 | |
| Swine or poultry, regardless of age or breeding status | Cottonseed meal | 300 | |
| Vomitoxin * | Swine | Grain and grain by-products not to exceed 20% of diet | 5000 |
| Complete diet | 1000 | ||
| Chickens | Grain and grain by-products not to exceed 20% of diet | 10,000 | |
| Complete diet | 5000 | ||
| Fumonisin ** | Swine | Maize and maize by-products not to exceed 50% of the diet | 20,000 |
| Complete diet | 10,000 | ||
| Poultry being raised for slaughter and hens laying eggs for human consumption | Maize and maize by-products not to exceed 50% of the diet | 100,000 | |
| Complete diet | 50,000 | ||
| All other species or classes of livestock | Maize and maize by-products not to exceed 50% of the diet | 10,000 | |
| Complete diet | 10,000 |
* 88 percent dry matter basis, ** Dry weight basis.
Raw materials used in pig and poultry feed and risk of mycotoxin contamination.
| Raw Material | % in Diet | Mycotoxins n |
|---|---|---|
| Maize | 0–60 a | High levels of Afla, OTA, DON, FB, ZEA contamination possible. Marked geographic variations. |
| Sorghum | 0–60 b | Few data available. Same mycotoxins as maize but at lower rates. |
| Millet | 0–60 | Few data available. Could be relatively resistant to fungal infection compared with other cereals. |
| Wheat | 0–30 c | Contamination by OTA, DON, FB, ZEA possible, with marked geographic variations. Usually weakly contaminated by Afla. |
| Barley | 0–30 d | Same mycotoxins as wheat, with marked variations depending on the breed. |
| Oats | 0–90 e | Same mycotoxins as wheat, marked variations. T2 and HT2 can be high. |
| Rice | 0–30 | Same mycotoxins as wheat with lower concentrations of mycotoxins except Afla and OTA, which can be high. |
| Cereal by-products | 0–30 f | Physicochemical properties of mycotoxins, location in the grain, and process used influence partitioning. |
| Oil or fat | <5 | Usually low in refined oils. |
| Soybean meal | 0–40 g | Low level contamination by Afla, OTA, DON, FB, ZEA. Marked geographic variations. |
| Rapeseed and canola meals | 0–20 h | Indirect evidence for the presence of Afla, ZEA, DON, alternariol, tenuazonic acid and gliotoxin at levels near that of soybean meal. Complementary data required. |
| Sunflower meal | 0–40 i | |
| Cottonseed meal | 0–40 j | High level of Afla observed in some parts of the world. |
| Animal protein | <5 k | Very low contamination. |
| Alternative ingredients | 0–80 l | Sparse data, Afla the most frequently reported. Complementary data required. |
| Other ingredients | <1–15 m | Not contaminated |
a Can increase to 99% in ducks and geese due to force feeding; b Replacing more than 50% of maize can reduce performances; c Can be increased to 80%–90% in some diets; d Fiber content limits use for poultry; e High fiber content limits use for poultry. Energy requirements influence the rate of incorporation in pig diets; f Usually less than 15% in poultry, 30% in pig; g Rate of incorporation varies with oil extraction; h High fiber content and anti-nutrients limit incorporation of rapeseed to 10%. Higher proportions of canola can be used; i High fiber content but no anti-nutrients; j High fiber content and toxic compounds (gossypol); k Mainly dried whey and fish meal; l Great number of raw materials, rate of incorporation varies with cost of production and local availability; m Amino acids, vitamins, mineral, feed additives; n Afla: aflatoxins; OTA: ochratoxin A; DON: deoxynivalenol; FB: fumonisins; ZEA: zearalenone; High level = found at higher levels than the guidelines in Table 1 and Table 2 at the 75th percentile, low level = never found at higher levels than the guidelines in Table 1 and Table 2.
Figure 1Consequences of a difference in sensitivity for descriptive statistics of mycotoxin contents. (A) Method of analysis with a limit of quantitation (LOQ) of 50 µg/kg (old method); (B) method of analysis with an LOQ of 1 µg/kg (new method).
Worldwide occurrence of mycotoxin contamination a in maize, wheat and soybean meal (adapted from Rodrigues et Naehrer, 2012) [100].
| Afla b | Maize | 10.1– | 1.8–4.9– | 1.5–1.8–3 (16; 31%) | 4.0–12– |
| Wheat | 4.1–6.6–9.0 (15; 20%) | 2.6–2.6–3.0 (40; 3%) | 1.6–2–2 (13; 31%) | 1.6–1.8–6 (14; 43%) | |
| Soybean meal | 2.0–2.0–2.0 (74; 1%) | 1.0–1.0–1.0A (60; 8%) | 1.2–1.2–1.3 (8; 38%) | 1.8–2.7– | |
| OTA c | Maize | 2.3–3.1–18 (126; 10%) | 71– | 2.4–2.5–3 (21; 10%) | 9.3–29–46 (31; 29%) |
| Wheat | 0.8–0.8–0.8 (2; 50%) | 33–39–43 (11; 45%) | 3.8–5.4–331 (22; 23%) | 0.7–0.7–1.0 (13; 8%) | |
| Soybean meal | 4.6–5.2–6 (18; 17%) | 1.0–10–10 (51; 10%) | 21–21–21 (3; 33%) | 1.2–1.3–1.3 (22; 18%) | |
| DON d | Maize | 565–931– | 172–241–939 (322; 17%) | 716–1576– | 523–705–3851 (59; 47%) |
| Wheat | 600–976– | 906–1006–2520 (17; 53%) | 514–960– | 716–1864–3505 (24; 38%) | |
| Soybean meal | 187–734– | 197–292–428 (55; 29%) | 450–494–741 (43; 21%) | 339–428–908 (25; 24%) | |
| FB e | Maize | 490–1161– | 2008–3890– | 684–4504–7680 (30; 60%) | 1407–3266–11,050 (48; 90%) |
| Wheat | (7; 0%) | 1407–1561–1715 (40; 5%) | 246–348–450 (9; 33%) | 151–538–925 (10; 30%) | |
| Soybean meal | (46; 0%) | 274–295–315 (60; 5%) | (2; 0%) | 95–511–5088 (21; 29%) | |
| ZEA f | Maize | 86–168– | 87–222–1800 (321; 43%) | 79–155–849 (379; 39%) | 166–276–1546 (52; 21%) |
| Wheat | 275–394–513 (16; 13%) | 73–232–393 (32; 47%) | 65–123–336 (256; 12%) | (17; 0%) | |
| Soybean meal | 51–142–144 (50; 10%) | 81–130–807 (53; 34%) | 36–46–56 (31; 6%) | (23; 0%) | |
| Afla a | Maize | 7.0– | 3.0–4.0–5.0 (11; 18%) | ||
| Wheat | 3.3–3.6–20 (76; 7%) | 1.0–1.0–1.0 (40; 3%) | ND | 2.0–5.0– | |
| Soybean meal | 2.8–2.9–3 (36; 6%) | 1.0–3.3–74 (109; 22%) | 2.0–3.5–7 (16; 63%) | 1.0–1.0–1.0 (3; 67%) | |
| OTA | Maize | 1.4–4.1–19 (420; 10%) | 3.0–6.3–80 (218; 12%) | 7.4–15– | 1.2–1.2–1.2 (11; 9%) |
| Wheat | 1.0–2.0–7 (67; 22%) | 3.9–5.7–30 (40; 30%) | ND | 1.6–3.7–4 (108; 8%) | |
| Soybean meal | 1.6–4.4–19 (33; 24%) | 2.4–5.6–21 (105; 16%) | 14–23–46 (16; 56%) | 3.1–3.1–3.1 (3; 33%) | |
| DON | Maize | 640–1444– | 182–352–4805 (218; 45%) | 190–349–1150 (106; 22%) | 179–214–249 (11; 27%) |
| Wheat | 426–1279– | 199–1483– | ND | 719– | |
| Soybean meal | 107–202–314 (37; 38%) | 228–285–973 (105; 18%) | 249–251–259 (16; 31%) | 150–150–150 (3; 33%) | |
| FB | Maize | 1519–3594– | 1033–1720–19,289 (326; 83%) | 541–796–6196 (108; 74%) | 2344–4023–5438 (11; 64%) |
| Wheat | 298–471–874 (73; 11%) | 172–232–292 (40; 5%) | ND | 196–216–1196 (109; 12%) | |
| Soybean meal | 316–319–321 (35; 6%) | 228–285–973 (109; 4%) | (16; 0%) | (3; 0%) | |
| ZEA | Maize | 176–435– | 97–206–2601 (319; 20%) | 79–174–1099 (108; 9%) | 626–939–1251 (11; 27%) |
| Wheat | 48–82–465 (72; 42%) | 53–217– | ND | 180–351– | |
| Soybean meal | 31–42–398 (34; 35%) | 38–53–70 (105; 15%) | (16; 0%) | 150–150–150 (3; 33 %) |
a Descriptive statistics are: Median—75th percentile—Maximum (number of samples analyzed; percent of positive); Detailed information on the sampling protocol and methods of analysis used can be found in the original manuscript of Rodrigues et Naehrer [100]; b Afla: aflatoxins; data in bold: above 20 µg/kg (maximum regulatory level, EU, see Table 1 for details); c OTA: ochratoxin A; data in bold: above 250 µg/kg (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); d DON: deoxynivalenol; data in bold: above 2000 µg/kg (maximum recommended level, FDA, see Table 2 for details); e FB: fumonisins; data in bold: above 20,000 µg/kg (maximum recommended level, FDA, see Table 2 for details); f ZEA: zearalenone; data in bold: above 3000 µg/kg corn or 2000 µg/kg wheat (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details).
Example of reference diets that could be used for pig production (adapted from Holden et al., 1996) [150].
| Ingredient (g/kg) | Growing Pig (kg) | Sow | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–30 | 80–160 | Gestation | Lactation | |
| Maize | 358 | 766 | 863 | 688 |
| Soybean meal | 460 | 210 | 100 | 275 |
| Dried whey | 150 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other ingredients a | 32 | 24 | 37 | 37 |
a Minerals, amino acids, vitamins.
Calculated mycotoxin levels in feed using the median, the 75th percentile, and the maximum contamination listed in Table 5 for the four reference diets listed in Table 6. Data in bold exceed EU guidelines for mycotoxins in feed (Table 1).
| World area | Production | Afla b | OTA c | DON d | FB e | ZEA f | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | Pig a | 10–30 | 4.5–23.1–330 | 2.9–3.5–9.2 | 288–671–11,444 | 175–416–8198 | 54.2–126–1780 |
| 80–160 | 8.1–47.9–705 | 2.7–3.5–15 | 472–867–20,228 | 375–889–17,541 | 76.6–159–3697 | ||
| Sow | Gestation | 8.9–53.7–794 | 2.4–3.2–16.1 | 506–877–22,039 | 423–1002–19,763 | 79.3–159–4146 | |
| Lactation | 7.5–43.2–634 | 2.8–3.6–14 | 440–842–18,644 | 337–799–15,755 | 73.2–155–3333 | ||
| South America | Pig a | 10–30 | 1.1–2.2–98.2 | 25.9–90.9–341 | 152–221–533 | 845–1528–19,370 | 68.4–139–1016 |
| 80–160 | 1.6–4–209 | 54.6–187–721 | 173–246–809 | 1596–3042–41,200 | 83.7–197–1548 | ||
| Sow | Gestation | 1.7–4.3–236 | 61.4–209–811 | 168–237–853 | 1760–3387–46,375 | 83.2–205–1634 | |
| Lactation | 1.5–3.6–188 | 49.1–169–649 | 172–246–764 | 1457–2757–37,032 | 82.1–189–1460 | ||
| Southern Europe | Pig a | 10–30 | 2.3–5.5–25.4 | 3.9–11–17.1 | 343–449–1796 | 547–1404–6296 | 59.4–98.8–554 |
| 80–160 | 3.4–9.8–38.1 | 7.4–22.5–35.5 | 472–630–3140 | 1098–2609–9533 | 127–211–1184 | ||
| Sow | Gestation | 3.6–10.6–40.1 | 8.1–25.2–39.8 | 485–651–3414 | 994–2388–10,045 | 143–238–1334 | |
| Lactation | 3.2–9–36 | 6.7–20.3–32 | 453–603–2899 | 994–2388–9002 | 114–190–1064 | ||
| Northern Asia | Pig a | 10–30 | 3.8–14.2–1679 | 1.2–3.5–15.5 | 278–610–5541 | 689–1433–8560 | 77.3–175–2849 |
| 80–160 | 6–28.2–3591 | 1.4–4.1–18.5 | 513–1149–11,612 | 1230–2820–18,068 | 141–342–5787 | ||
| Sow | Gestation | 6.3–31.4–4045 | 1.4–4–18.3 | 563–1266–13,039 | 1343–3134–20,312 | 155–380–6466 | |
| Lactation | 5.6–25.6–3226 | 1.4–4–18.3 | 470–1049–10,457 | 1132–2560–16,256 | 130–311–5232 | ||
| South-East Asia | Pig a | 10–30 | 35.2–75.3–965 | 2.2–4.8–38.3 | 170–257–2168 | 475–747–7353 | 52.2–98.1–963 |
| 80–160 | 74.5–159–2008 | 2.8–6–65.7 | 187–330–3885 | 839–1377–14,980 | 82.3–169–2007 | ||
| Sow | Gestation | 83.8–178–2252 | 2.8–6–71.1 | 180–332–4244 | 914–1513–16,744 | 87.5–183–2252 | |
| Lactation | 67–178–1810 | 2.7–5.9–60.8 | 188–321–3573 | 773–1262–13,538 | 77.2–156–1809 | ||
a Body weight (kg); b Afla: aflatoxins; data in bold: above 20 µg/kg feed (maximum regulatory level, EU, see Table 1 for details); c OTA: ochratoxin A; data in bold: above 50 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); d DON: deoxynivalenol; data in bold: above 900 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); e FB: fumonisins; data in bold: above 5000 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); f ZEA: zearalenone; data in bold: above 100 or 250 µg/kg feed in piglets and adults, respectively (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details).
Example of replacing maize by wheat that can be used in broilers (adapted from Marquardt et al., 1994) [152].
| Ingredient (g/kg) | Maize/Soybean | Wheat/Soybean |
|---|---|---|
| Maize | 628.3 | 0 |
| Wheat | 0 | 676.5 |
| Soybean meal | 300 | 200 |
| Other energy source a | 20 | 70 |
| Other protein source b | 10 | 10 |
| Other ingredients c | 41.7 | 43.5 |
a Tallow, sunflower oil; b Soybean concentrate; c Minerals, amino acids, vitamins.
Calculated mycotoxin levels in feed using the median, the 75th percentile, and the maximum of contamination listed in Table 5 for the four reference diets listed in Table 8. Data in bold exceed EU guidelines for mycotoxins in feed (Table 1).
| World Area | Feed a | Afla b | OTA | DON | FB | ZEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | C + S | 6.9–39.6–579 | 2.8–3.5–13.1 | 411–805–17,295 | 308–729–14,388 | 69–148–3051 |
| W + S | 3.2–4.9–6.5 | 1.5–1.6–1.7 | 443–807–5836 | 0–0–0 | 196–288–376 | |
| South America | C + S | 1.4–3.4–172 | 44.9–154–593 | 167–239–718 | 1344–2533–33,834 | 79–178–1373 |
| W + S | 2–2–2.2 | 22.5–28.4–31.1 | 652–739–1790 | 1007–1115–1223 | 66–183–427 | |
| Southern Europe | C + S | 3.1–8.3–33.9 | 6.2–18.6–29.3 | 430–571–2692 | 913–2205–8469 | 104–173–971 |
| W + S | 1.4–1.8–8.3 | 0.7–0.7–0.9 | 552–1347–2553 | 121–466–1643 | 0–0–0 | |
| Northern Asia | C + S | 5.2–23.5–2946 | 1.4–3.9–17.6 | 434–968–9565 | 1049–2354–14,861 | 120–286–4798 |
| W + S | 2.8–3–14.1 | 1–2.2–8.5 | 310–906–3669 | 265–382–655 | 39–64–394 | |
| South-East Asia | C + S | 61.2–130–1656 | 2.6–5.6–56.6 | 183–307–3311 | 717–1166–12,411 | 72–145–1655 |
| W + S | 0.9–1.3–15.5 | 3.1–5–24–5 | 180–1060–28,228 | 162–214–392 | 43–157–4507 |
a C + S: maize + soybeal meal; W + S: Wheat + soybean meal; b Afla: aflatoxins; data in bold: above 20 µg/kg feed (maximum regulatory level, EU, see Table 1 for details); c OTA: ochratoxin A; data in bold: above 100 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); d DON: deoxynivalenol; data in bold: above 5000 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); e FB: fumonisins; data in bold: above 20,000 µg/kg feed (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details); f ZEA: zearalenone; data in bold: above 3000 or 2000 µg/kg in corn and wheat, respectively (maximum recommended level, EU, see Table 1 for details).