Occurrence of ochratoxin A-producing fungi in raw Brazilian coffee

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Abstract

Ochratoxin A (OA)-producing fungi were identified in coffee at different stages of maturation. The toxin was quantified in coffee during terrace drying and in coffee stored in barns. By direct plating, a high level of contamination (100%) was found in the coffee beans studied, with the genus Aspergillus representing 33.2%, of which Aspergillus ochraceus and Aspergillus niger represented 10.3 and 22.9%, respectively, of the strains isolated from the coffee beans. The capacity to produce ochratoxin was determined in 155 strains of A. ochraceus and A. niger using both the agar plug method and extraction with chloroform, giving positive results for 88.1% of the A. ochraceus strains and 11.5% of the A. niger strains. Analysis for OA in the terrace and barn coffee samples showed that, independent of cultivar, year harvested, or production region, all except one of the samples analyzed showed mycotoxin levels below the limit suggested by the European Common Market (8 μg/kg), thus indicating that the problem is restricted and due to severe faults in harvesting and storage practices.

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Urbano, G. R., Taniwaki, M. H., Leitão, M. F. D. F., & Vicentini, M. C. (2001). Occurrence of ochratoxin A-producing fungi in raw Brazilian coffee. Journal of Food Protection, 64(8), 1226–1230. https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X-64.8.1226

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