Abstract

As a valuable food base and safe shelter, large agricultural fields create favourable living conditions for wild boars for most of the year. The occurrence of mould in these fields, causing hormonal disturbances, may lead to a lower age of sexual maturity and a prolonged breeding season, and therefore, the population growth in farmlands can be markedly higher than that in extensive woodlands. This study was initiated because of reproductive cycle disturbances in wild boar populations, which were presumably linked with habitat and food types, especially rotten maize. To determine if the major sources of zearalenone (ZEN) in female wild boars are maize cobs infected with mycotoxins, we compared the concentrations of ZEN and its metabolites in organs, tissues and body fluids of wild boars hunted in extensive maize fields and in extensive woodlands where no large maize fields were located within a distance of several km. Samples of blood, bile, liver, kidneys, muscles, urine, stomach and colon contents as well as ovaries from young female wild boars (40–60 kg) were collected in 2011–2014 and prepared for liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS). The results showed that ZEN was present in most of the samples, from both farmlands and woodlands, but its concentration within individual types of the analysed body fluids or tissues differed depending mainly on habitat type. In nearly all the analysed cases, higher concentrations of ZEN and its derivatives were detected in the samples collected from wild boars in farmlands, suggesting that wild boars living and feeding in extensive maize fields take in markedly higher amounts of mycoestrogens.

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