The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan
An estimated 57 % of the black Africans in South Africa live in rural areas. Traditional vegetables play an important role in providing nutrition for rural subsistence households. Morogo refers to traditional leafy vegetables that are well adapted to local growing conditions, produce high yields and...
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North-West University
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nwu-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-11932014-04-16T03:53:00ZThe occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji JivanJivan, Sangita DerajiAn estimated 57 % of the black Africans in South Africa live in rural areas. Traditional vegetables play an important role in providing nutrition for rural subsistence households. Morogo refers to traditional leafy vegetables that are well adapted to local growing conditions, produce high yields and can be cultivated cost-effectively. Some of these vegetables occur as weedy plants in cultivated lands. The dietary value and cultivation practices of traditional vegetables are largely embedded in indigenous knowledge systems of local communities and not well documented in scientific literature. The present study was conducted in a rural African community in the Mopani District of the Limpopo Province. Questionnaires were used to obtain and document information related to morogo types consumed, subsistence agricultural practices as well as traditional food preservation and processing methods. Since dietary safety of food produced for rural household subsistence has - received little attention, the mycological safety of morogo was investigated. Standard techniques were employed to isolate potential toxigenic fungi from fresh and processed household morogo. Members of the fungal genera Aspergillus and Penicillium were present in low numbers. Alternaria was isolated in relatively high numbers mainly from internal leaf structures and Fusarium strains from leaf surfaces. Fusarium levels were found to be lower in samples of sun-dried, cooked and rinsed morogo. Molecular techniques were employed to confirm the identity of suspected fumonigenic Fusarium isolates and the presence of fumonisin-encoding genes. Fumonisin-producing Fusarium in the subsistence agro environment implies a risk that morogo might be contaminated with fumonisin mycotoxins. Subsequent research should be aimed at investigating the source of Fusarium contamination in the subsistence agro-environment and identifying risk factors for toxin production in traditional morogo.Thesis (M.Sc. (Microbiology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.North-West University2009-02-26T08:51:19Z2009-02-26T08:51:19Z2006Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/1193 |
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NDLTD |
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description |
An estimated 57 % of the black Africans in South Africa live in rural areas. Traditional
vegetables play an important role in providing nutrition for rural subsistence households.
Morogo refers to traditional leafy vegetables that are well adapted to local growing
conditions, produce high yields and can be cultivated cost-effectively. Some of these
vegetables occur as weedy plants in cultivated lands. The dietary value and cultivation
practices of traditional vegetables are largely embedded in indigenous knowledge systems of
local communities and not well documented in scientific literature. The present study was
conducted in a rural African community in the Mopani District of the Limpopo Province.
Questionnaires were used to obtain and document information related to morogo types
consumed, subsistence agricultural practices as well as traditional food preservation and
processing methods. Since dietary safety of food produced for rural household subsistence has
-
received little attention, the mycological safety of morogo was investigated. Standard
techniques were employed to isolate potential toxigenic fungi from fresh and processed
household morogo. Members of the fungal genera Aspergillus and Penicillium were present in
low numbers. Alternaria was isolated in relatively high numbers mainly from internal leaf
structures and Fusarium strains from leaf surfaces. Fusarium levels were found to be lower in
samples of sun-dried, cooked and rinsed morogo. Molecular techniques were employed to
confirm the identity of suspected fumonigenic Fusarium isolates and the presence of
fumonisin-encoding genes. Fumonisin-producing Fusarium in the subsistence agro environment
implies a risk that morogo might be contaminated with fumonisin mycotoxins.
Subsequent research should be aimed at investigating the source of Fusarium contamination
in the subsistence agro-environment and identifying risk factors for toxin production in
traditional morogo. === Thesis (M.Sc. (Microbiology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007. |
author |
Jivan, Sangita Deraji |
spellingShingle |
Jivan, Sangita Deraji The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
author_facet |
Jivan, Sangita Deraji |
author_sort |
Jivan, Sangita Deraji |
title |
The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
title_short |
The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
title_full |
The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
title_fullStr |
The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
title_full_unstemmed |
The occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of Giyani / by Sangita Deraji Jivan |
title_sort |
occurrence of toxigenic moulds in traditional household morogo of giyani / by sangita deraji jivan |
publisher |
North-West University |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/1193 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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