Farmers without fungus: how to store peanuts to reduce toxins.African peanut farmers can slash their exposure to a class of harmful fungal toxins by adopting several simple measures after the harvest, researchers have shown. In many developing countries, the carcinogenic carcinogenic having a capacity for carcinogenesis. contaminants called aflatoxins aflatoxins (ăf`lətäk'sĭnz), a group of secondary metabolites that are cancer-causing byproducts of a mold that grows on nuts and grains, particularly peanuts. are abundant in subsistence crops, including peanuts and cereals. Peanuts become tainted with aflatoxins during storage under hot, moist conditions that promote fungal growth. Insects feeding on the stored peanuts spread the aflatoxin-producing soil fungi and damage the shells that protect the edible kernels. Aflatoxins, which withstand cooking, occasionally cause rapid, deadly poisonings in people who have eaten heavily contaminated foods. Smaller, repeated doses gradually elevate the risk of liver cancer Liver Cancer Definition Liver cancer is a relatively rare form of cancer but has a high mortality rate. Liver cancers can be classified into two types. and, in children, impair growth and immune function Immune function The state in which the body recognizes foreign materials and is able to neutralize them before they can do any harm. Mentioned in: Herbalism, Traditional Chinese, Stress Reduction . "These are foods people eat every day; so exposure is very high and chronic," says molecular epidemiologist Chris Wild of the University of Leeds Organisation Faculties The various schools, institutes and centres of the University are arranged into nine faculties, each with a dean, pro-deans and central functions:
To minimize aflatoxins in stored peanuts, Wild and his colleagues advocate a suite of farming practices. These include hand sorting peanuts and discarding visibly moldy moldy animal feed overgrown with fungus; the feed may be harvested and stored or be still in the ground. moldy corn disease see leukoencephalomalacia, fusariummoniliforme. or damaged ones; sun drying the peanuts on fiber mats rather than directly on the ground to reduce contact with ground moisture; storing peanuts in sacks made from breathable breath·a·ble adj. 1. Suitable or pleasant for breathing: breathable air. 2. Permitting air to pass through: a breathable fabric. natural fibers rather than moisture-retaining plastic; storing the sacks on wooden pallets to avoid contact with the ground; and treating the ground beneath the pallets with insecticide. "These are things people do already; but in a fairly patchy manner," Wild says. With the help of government workers in Guinea, in western Africa, the researchers encouraged 300 subsistence peanut farmers in 10 villages to use all the methods. The team bought pallets, mats, sacks, and insecticide for those farmers, spending about $50 per family. Nearby villages, where 300 peanut farmers employed none or only some of the storage techniques, provided a comparison group. Blood samples taken from the farmers 5 months after the harvest indicate that those assigned to use the improved storage methods had only 43 percent as much aflatoxin exposure as the others did, Wild and his team report in the June 4 Lancet. "This is an important demonstration that a lot can be accomplished by some rudimentary improvements in storage conditions," says Gerald N. Wogan of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, , who has studied aflatoxins' carcinogenic properties since the 1960s. Some subsistence farmers sell any surplus peanuts for export, notes toxicologist John Groopman of Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C. in Baltimore, who shares a U.S. government research grant with Wild's team. "Being able to produce a higher-quality peanut with very little aflatoxin contamination means that farmers will be able to get a higher price for their crop," he says. |
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