Composting coffee wastes, a potential source of ochratoxigenic fungi and ochratoxin A contamination

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Abstract

Ochratoxin A (OTA) has been extensively documented as a global contaminant of a wide variety of food commodities including the green coffee bean, but there is no clear information available on the spread of Aspergillus ochraceus in the coffee production chain. In this study, the growth of A. ochraceus and the fate of OTA during composting of solid coffee wastes, i.e. pulp and husk, were investigated. A trial was set up with pulp and husk alone or in combination, naturally and artificially contaminated with A. ochraceus. OTA was detected at levels up to 2.6 and 6.2 ng/g in naturally and artificially contaminated pulp, respectively. At the end of the composting process, 8.4 and 14.2 ng OTA per g were measured in naturally and artificially contaminated husk, respectively. Throughout the composting process, A. ochraceus counts did not show any clear increasing or decreasing trend. © 2012 Wageningen Academic Publishers.

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APA

Velmourougane, K., Bhat, R., & Gopinandhan, T. N. (2012). Composting coffee wastes, a potential source of ochratoxigenic fungi and ochratoxin A contamination. World Mycotoxin Journal, 5(4), 373–376. https://doi.org/10.3920/WMJ2012.1386

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