In recent years the incidence of Fusarium spp. isolated from Stem End Rot (SER) and Internal Core Rot (ICR) of grapefruit and oranges has increased markedly.
Fusarium spp. were isolated from apparently healthy green buttons and from the tissue underneath the button of healthy fruits.
Of all the SER‐ and ICR‐rotted fruit, the incidence of Fusarium spp. alone and of Fusarium spp. with Alternaria citri was between 75 and 100%.
Fusarium was also found to be the single causal agent of ICR of oranges and grapefruit.
Species of Fusarium isolated from Stem End Rot and Internal Core Rot of citrus fruit were F. oxysporum, F. moniliforme and recently also F. culmorum.
Boneless hams processed in elastic rubber nettings contain high levels of nitrosamines in the outermost layer. The precursors of the nitrosamines are zinc dibutyl-or dibenzyldithiocarbamate used as a vulcanizing agent in the formulation of the rubber. The outermost layer from 59 commercial hams was analyzed for 11 volatile nitrosamines including N-nitrosodibutylamine (NDBA) and N-nitrosodibenzylamine (NDBzA). The principal nitrosamine, NDBzA, was detected in 32 (54%) ham samples at the 10-100 ppb range; it exceeded 100 ppb in 18 (30%) samples, with the highest at 512.2 ppb. No nitrosamine was detected in 7 of 59 ham samples. To determine the cause of the high NDBzA values, various types of unused nettings (from different manufacturers) accompanying the samples were analyzed for nitrosamines. No correlation was found between the NDBzA content of the hams and the nettings. The results suggest that the problem of nitrosamine formation in these products has not yet been resolved.
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