Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6377980 | Journal of Cereal Science | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Reducing the level of infection of cereal heads caused by Fusarium and associated mycotoxin accumulation in grains is of a high priority in order to secure the yield, agronomic performance, and food and feed safety from field to table. Strategies to tackle the problem have been proposed at many levels, including greater knowledge of the biology of toxigenic fungi and of plant-pathogen interactions, monitoring activities which extend from the field to the end-products, pre-breeding, breeding and transgenesis to develop new resistant plant varieties, crop protection based on synthetic or natural molecules, biocontrol of fungal populations, the development and use of models that take into account the climatic conditions, and the adoption of technological protocols for reducing or inactivating mycotoxins. This review article highlights that the problem is very complex but that the scientific community continues to produce important knowledge and potential solutions.
Keywords
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Agronomy and Crop Science
Authors
Valeria Terzi, Giorgio Tumino, A. Michele Stanca, Caterina Morcia,