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On-farm maize insect pest and mycotoxin levels in Ghana

Zugehörigkeit
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana
Danso, James K.;
Zugehörigkeit
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana
Manu, Naomi;
Zugehörigkeit
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana
Osekre, Enoch A.;
Zugehörigkeit
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, USA
Opit, George P.;
Zugehörigkeit
USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Manhattan, USA
Armstrong, Paul R.;
Zugehörigkeit
USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Manhattan, USA
Arthur, Frank H.;
Zugehörigkeit
USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Manhattan, USA
Campbell, James F.;
Zugehörigkeit
Fort Valley State University, Fort Valley, Georgia, USA
Mbata, George N.;
Zugehörigkeit
University of Kentucky, Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Princeton, USA
McNeill, Samuel G.

Maize post-harvest losses are perennial in Ghana but reliable comparative information on on-farm losses of maize produced in the Middle and Northern Belts of Ghana is lacking. Two studies were conducted from September 2015 to February 2016 to identify factors contributing to on-farm losses of maize in these two Belts. In the Northern Belt, the study was conducted in six communities including Adubiyili, Diari, Pong-Tamale, Savelugu, Toroyili and Zamnayili; and in the Middle Belt, in Ejura, Sekyedumase and Amantin communities. Moisture content, percent weight loss, percent insect damaged kernels (IDK) on numerical basis (%IDKnb) and percent IDK by weight basis (%IDKwb), insect pest abundance, and mycotoxin levels were estimated. Moisture content values of maize at pre-harvest and heaping stages in all nine communities were below 15%. Sitophilus zeamais, Sitotroga cerealella, Cathartus quadricollis, and Carpophilus dimidiatus were found to attack maize onfarm in communities in the Middle Belt, but no adult insect pests were collected on pre-harvested maize in the Northern Belt. The %IDKnb values on-farm in all nine communities were < 2% per 250 g. Mean aflatoxin levels below 15 ppb were obtained from pre-harvested maize in both regions but levels above 15 ppb were obtained from heaped maize on-farm. Fumonisin levels of maize were below 4 ppm on pre-harvested and in heaped maize in both regions. Results show that heaping maize on-farm increases aflatoxin levels beyond the acceptable threshold level and should not be practiced.

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