Abstract

Fusarium head blight is one of the most noxious cereal diseases. Worldwide, F. graminearum (FG) and the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON) is the most dominant species/mycotoxin in barley and wheat. Barley is often produced as on farm feed and thus routine mycotoxin analyses similar to those of cereals for human consumption are not performed. Hence, an early prediction of mycotoxin levels is important for farmers to minimise the risk of contaminated feed but also of contaminated cereals entering the cereal supply chain. Therefore, climate chamber experiments with artificial FG infection of barley investigating the influence of different temperatures (10 °C, 15 °C, 20 °C) and durations (4 h, 8 h, 12 h) at 99% relative humidity were conducted to accumulate data to develop a forecasting system. An up to three times higher DON contamination in the 15 °C treatments for the feed barley variety Ascona was detected compared with the 10 °C and 20 °C treatments. For the malting barley variety Concerto, the prolonged humidity durations had a stronger effect under all tested temperatures and resulted in up to two times higher DON contaminations. In addition, field experiments where spore deposition during anthesis as well as disease incidence, fungal amount and mycotoxins were observed, showed that the overwintered straw treatment resulted, depending on the year, in a three times higher FG incidence and DON content compared with the control and freshly inoculated straw treatment.

Highlights

  • Fungi of the genus Fusarium can cause Fusarium head blight (FHB), one of the most noxious cereal diseases

  • Mycotoxins are harmful to humans and animals and the European Commission has set a maximum level for DON in unprocessed barley intended for human consumption of 1250 μg kg−1 (The European Commission 2006), which was adopted in the respective Swiss legislation

  • We assume that the cooler conditions during the earlier anthesis of barley compared with wheat are more favourable for an F. graminearum (FG) infection

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Summary

Introduction

Fungi of the genus Fusarium can cause Fusarium head blight (FHB), one of the most noxious cereal diseases. In Switzerland, F. graminearum (FG) is the most occurring species in barley and wheat (Schöneberg et al 2016; Vogelgsang et al 2011) and the typical symptoms are discoloured and shrivelled grains (Parry et al 1995). In Switzerland, barley is mainly grown as feed and used for human consumption as malt and beer or for baking and cooking purposes. Feed barley is generally used directly on farm and not regularly analysed compared with cereals used for human consumption which can result in undetected, elevated mycotoxin concentrations. Pigs fed with DON contaminated barley showed a reduced feed intake, diarrhoea and vomiting (reviewed in D'Mello et al 1999)

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