Abstract

A healthy, sustainable diet contributes massively to the general well-being of a population. Nowadays, people have started to significantly improve their diet by reducing processed products, as well as including a higher number of fruits, vegetables, cereals, and spices to flavor their food. However, making the right food choice, without any harmful pathogens that pose a risk to human health, can remain quite challenging. Despite prioritizing food safety in its processing, production, and distribution, food contamination remains a prevalent and undesirable occurrence. This study aims to detect the fungal load of commonly used green leaf spices commercialized in Romania and the impact of those microorganisms and their secondary metabolites on consumers. Six (28.57%) out of the twenty-one tested samples showed different degrees of fungal contamination, mostly with Aspergillus section Flavi, followed by Aspergillus section Nigri and other fungi in lower amounts. Three main fungal secondary metabolites with potential impact on consumers, namely mycotoxins, were determined with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC): Aflatoxin B1, Ochratoxin A, and Zearalenone. Moreover, their legal limits (5 μg/kg, 15 μg/kg, and 50 μg/kg, respectively) were exceeded by 95.24%, 100%, and 85.71%, respectively. Environmental factors that affect the processing and packaging of these spices did not show any relation to fungal contamination, conversely to price, which significantly correlates with the mycological quality of the products.

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