Hazelnuts are consumed as fresh, raw, roasted fruit or ingredient in foods especially chocolates and cookie formulations (DiNunzio, 2019). The hazelnut is also very susceptible to infection, contamination, and growth of aflatoxigenic fungi contamination with aflatoxins (AFs), created by molds named Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus, before and during harvest and/or more specifically during storage. Aflatoxins are more important than other fungal toxins because of carcinogenic effects and acute poisoning and also cause serious economic loses, destroying around 20% of crops (Probst et al., 2007). In nature, four closely related components of aflatoxin (aflatoxin B 1 , aflatoxin B 2 (AFB 2), aflatoxin G 1 (AFG 1), and aflatoxin G 2 (AFG 2) and metabolic products such as M 1 and M 2 can pollute flowers