Field ecology of the ochratoxin A-producing Penicillium verrucosum: survival and resource colonisation in soil

Mycopathologia. 1999;147(2):67-81. doi: 10.1023/a:1007003106343.

Abstract

A field experiment was conducted to elucidate the survival of P. verrucosum in infested bulk soil (T1) and infested soil with waste grain (T2). The infested soil and reference soil (T3) was filled into steel cylinders, which were buried and sampled 13 times during a period from October 1994 to March 1996. The abundance of P. verrucosum and indigenous soil fungi were assessed by dilution plating on a selective and diagnostic medium (DYSG). Kernel infection was examined in T2. According to our results, P. verrucosum seems well adapted to survival in arable soil and little affected by indigenous fungi. During the first autumn and winter the grain caused a proliferation of P. verrucosum while its abundance in bulk soil was more constant except for a decrease in February 95, which is ascribed to frost/thaw alternations. In T2, P. verrucosum initially infected more than 50% of the kernels but during the first few months it was ousted by other fungi. A hypothesis regarding waste grain as the natural niche for the fungus in the field was therefore partly rejected. A gradual decrease in the abundance of P. verrucosum in soil during spring, a die-off in the dry summer and a proliferation during the second winter were found in both T1 and T2. Our results cannot provide the reason for the increase during the second winter. On an overall basis, however, they show that P. verrucosum can survive in the field, proliferate on soil organic matter and probably become an integral part of the soil ecosystem. This may constitute a risk of grain contamination when given appropriate environmental conditions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Colony Count, Microbial
  • Edible Grain / microbiology
  • Mycotoxins / metabolism*
  • Ochratoxins / metabolism*
  • Penicillium / growth & development
  • Penicillium / metabolism
  • Penicillium / physiology*
  • Seasons
  • Soil Microbiology*

Substances

  • Mycotoxins
  • Ochratoxins
  • ochratoxin A