“…Global food quality and security is one of the most vitally crucial concerns because of the frequently encountered foodborne hazards in the food production process, such as pathogens, biotoxins, pesticides, veterinary drugs, heavy metal ions, and inappropriate treatment and storage, which lead to disadvantageous impacts on food resources, nutrition, and human health . Continuously, the primary challenge is how to timely and accurately detect foodborne hazards in the food product supply, especially under the circumstances of the rampant global climate change and the increasingly global population growth . Brierly, current agricultural productions encounter a great deal of stresses resulting from the frequent climate challenges, such as drought, extreme cold, drought, heat, salinity, and corresponding species variations of pathogenic and pest agents. , Meanwhile, the global population is projected to reach approximately 9.8 billion by 2050 from the current 7.7 billion, necessitating a minimum 50% increase in food supply to sustain the entire human population. , The increasingly grievous damage to global limited food resources and sharply ascending global food demand propose a brand-new monitoring requirement for global food practices.…”