High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide Mycotoxin contamination in India is not a series of random events. It reflects a structural constraint that becomes evident on closer examination. Data from grain surveys, milk testing, and export inspections consistently indicate widespread contamination. Cereals, groundnuts, spices, and dairy, all carry measurable burdens that frequently exceed international safety thresholds. This reality is expected given the wide temperature ranges, high seasonal humidity, and uneven storage conditions found across major production regions. While aflatoxins dominate the toxicological conversation because their DNA reactivity is well-understood, they are not the only threat. Fumonisins, ochratoxin A, and various trichothecenes add significant pressure through entirely different biochemical pathways. The primary outcome for the population is chronic exposure rather than sudden acute poisoning. This manifests as a wide spectrum of damage, ranging from elevated liver cancer risks and childhood growth impairment to reduced productivity in livestock and massive trade losses. The core problem is that mitigation itself is not the main limitation. Field studies clearly show that competitive exclusion using atoxigenic fungal strains, together with proper drying and low oxygen storage, can substantially suppress toxin formation. Even downstream processing and enzymatic treatments can reduce residues further. However, adoption remains incredibly uneven. Detection capacity shows a similar imbalance, with high-resolution analytical platforms available but locked in centralized urban facilities. Meanwhile, rapid screening tools are portable but are not yet integrated into routine monitoring at the farm gate. Export data make these consequences visible, as shipment rejections continue despite the availability of control strategies. Climate variability will likely intensify this constraint because projected shifts in temperature and rainfall increasingly overlap with fungal growth. Ultimately, evidence points to fragmented implementation. Until the gap narrows between scientific knowledge and field application, mycotoxin contamination will persist as a structural barrier to health and trade.
Barkale et al. (Tue,) studied this question.