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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 1999, p. 1444-1449, Vol. 65, No. 4
National Peanut Research Laboratory, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Dawson,
Georgia 31742
Received 22 June 1998/Accepted 16 January 1999
Soil isolates of Aspergillus flavus from a transect
extending from eastern New Mexico through Georgia to eastern Virginia were examined for production of aflatoxin B1 and
cyclopiazonic acid in a liquid medium. Peanut fields from major
peanut-growing regions (western Texas; central Texas; Georgia and
Alabama; and Virginia and North Carolina) were sampled, and fields with
other crops were sampled in regions where peanuts are not commonly
grown. The A. flavus isolates were identified as members of
either the L strain (n = 774), which produces
sclerotia that are >400 µm in diameter, or the S strain
(n = 309), which produces numerous small sclerotia
that are <400 µm in diameter. The S-strain isolates generally
produced high levels of aflatoxin B1, whereas the L-strain isolates were more variable in aflatoxin production; variation in
cyclopiazonic acid production also was greater in the L strain than in
the S strain. There was a positive correlation between aflatoxin
B1 production and cyclopiazonic acid production in both strains, although 12% of the L-strain isolates produced only
cyclopiazonic acid. Significant differences in production of aflatoxin
B1 and cyclopiazonic acid by the L-strain isolates were
detected among regions. In the western half of Texas and the
peanut-growing region of Georgia and Alabama, 62 to 94% of the
isolates produced >10 µg of aflatoxin B1 per ml. The
percentages of isolates producing >10 µg of aflatoxin B1
per ml ranged from 0 to 52% in the remaining regions of the transect;
other isolates were often nonaflatoxigenic. A total of 53 of the 126 L-strain isolates that did not produce aflatoxin B1 or
cyclopiazonic acid were placed in 17 vegetative compatibility groups.
Several of these groups contained isolates from widely separated
regions of the transect.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Regional Differences in Production of Aflatoxin
B1 and Cyclopiazonic Acid by Soil Isolates of
Aspergillus flavus along a Transect within the United
States
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Peanut
Research Laboratory, USDA, ARS, 1011 Forrester Dr., SE, Dawson, GA 31742. Phone: (912) 995-7410. Fax: (912) 995-7416. E-mail:
bhorn{at}nprl.usda.gov.
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