Aflatoxins and fumonisins co‑contamination effects on laying hens and use of mycotoxin detoxifiers as a mitigation strategy

dc.contributor.authorPhillis E. Ochieng
dc.contributor.authorDavid C. Kemboi
dc.contributor.authorSheila Okoth4
dc.contributor.author· Siegrid De Baere
dc.contributor.authorEtienne Cavalier
dc.contributor.authorErastus Kang’ethe
dc.contributor.authorBarbara Doupovec
dc.contributor.authorJames Gathumbi8
dc.contributor.authorMarie‑Louise Scippo
dc.contributor.authorGunther Antonissen
dc.contributor.authorJohanna F. Lindah
dc.contributor.authorSiska Croubels
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-09T07:34:15Z
dc.date.available2026-06-09T07:34:15Z
dc.date.issued2024-10-15
dc.descriptiondkemboi@chuka.ac.ke
dc.description.abstractThis study examined the effects of fumonisins (FBs) and aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), alone or in combination, on the productivity and health of laying hens, as well as the transfer of aflatoxins (AFs) to chicken food products. The efficacy and safety of mycotoxin detoxifiers (bentonite and fumonisin esterase) to mitigate these effects were also assessed. Laying hens (400) were divided into 20 groups and fed a control, moderate (54.6 µg/kg feed) or high (546 µg/kg feed) AFB1 or FBs (7.9 mg/kg feed) added diets, either alone or in combination, with the mycotoxin detoxifiers added in selected diets. Productivity was evaluated by feed intake, egg weight, egg production, and feed conversion ratio whereas health was assessed by organ weights, blood biochemistry, and mortality. Aflatoxins residues in plasma, liver, muscle, and eggs were determined using UHPLC-MS/MS methods. A diet with AFB1 at a concentration of 546 µg/kg feed decreased egg production and various AFB1-contaminated diets increased serum uric acid levels and weights of liver, spleen, heart, and gizzard. Interactions between AFB1 and FBs significantly impacted spleen, heart, and gizzard weights as well as AFB1 residues in eggs. Maximum AFB1 residues of 0.64 µg/kg and aflatoxin M1 (below limits of quantification) were observed in liver, plasma, and eggs of layers fed diets with AFB1. The mycotoxin detoxi- fiers reduced effects of AFB1 and FBs on egg production, organ weights, blood biochemistry, and AFB1 residues in tissues. This study highlights the importance of mycotoxin detoxifiers as a mitigation strategy against mycotoxins in poultry production.
dc.identifier.citationOchieng, P. E., Kemboi, D. C., Okoth, S., De Baere, S., Cavalier, E., Kang’ethe, E., Doupovec, B., Gathumbi, J., Scippo, M.-L., Antonissen, G., Lindahl, J. F., & Croubels, S. (2025). Aflatoxins and fumonisins co-contamination effects on laying hens and use of mycotoxin detoxifiers as a mitigation strategy. Mycotoxin Research, 41, 63–75.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.chuka.ac.ke/handle/123456789/22824
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMycotoxin Research
dc.subjectAflatoxins · Bentonite · Egg · Food and feed safety · Fumonisins · Kenya · Laying hen
dc.titleAflatoxins and fumonisins co‑contamination effects on laying hens and use of mycotoxin detoxifiers as a mitigation strategy
dc.typeArticle

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