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Uptake of deoxynivalenol by earthworms from Fusarium-infected wheat straw

Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Biodiversity, Johann Heinrich von Thuenen Institute, Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fishery, Braunschweig, Germany
Schrader, Stefan;
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Biodiversity, Johann Heinrich von Thuenen Institute, Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fishery, Braunschweig, Germany
Kramer, Susanne;
GND
1058930567
Zugehörigkeit
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute of Plant Protection in Field Crops and Grassland, Germany
Oldenburg, Elisabeth;
Zugehörigkeit
Department of Crop Science, Plant Pathology and Plant Protection, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany
Weinert, Joachim

Conservation tillage combined with crop-residue mulching is increasingly important to meet soil protection targets. Concurrently, the health risk of soil-borne pathogenic fungi like Fusarium species, which produce deoxynivalenol (DON) as their major mycotoxin, is increasing. The detritivorous earthworm species Lumbricus terrestris takes part in the efficient degradation of Fusarium-infected and DON-contaminated wheat straw. Against this background, a laboratory study was conducted to quantify by means of ELISA technique the uptake of DON and its possible absorption and accumulation in tissue by L. terrestris in the short-term (5 weeks) and long-term (11 weeks). The DON concentrations in L. terrestris of the Fusarium-infected treatment were significantly different in the order of gut tissue > body wall > gut content at both dates with a decline in the long-term. The DON concentrations in the tissues decreased by an order of magnitude of weeks to months.

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