open access publication

Article, 2024

Fungicidal effect of gaseous ozone in malting barley: Implications for Fusarium infections and grain germination

Journal of Cereal Science, ISSN 1095-9963, 0733-5210, Volume 118, Page 103973, 10.1016/j.jcs.2024.103973

Contributors

Sanchez, Daniela Rodarte [1] Jespersen, Birthe Møller 0000-0002-8695-1450 [2] Rasmussen, Lars Holm [3] Andersen, Mogens Larsen 0000-0003-4694-486X (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] University College Lillebaelt
  4. [NORA names: UCL University College; College; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  5. [3] University College Copenhagen
  6. [NORA names: KP University College Copenhagen; College; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Fungal infections pose a challenge in cereal grains, with Fusarium species, especially in malting barley, causing substantial economic losses and quality degradation. We investigated the effect of gaseous ozone on fungal deactivation and grain germination in spring malting barley, with focus on Fusarium spp. Five studies were performed: (1) ozone concentration (10–100 ppm) and exposure time (1–24 h) on high-moisture barley (19.8%); (2) ozone-treated barley stability over 120 days at 4 °C; (3) grain moisture content (12–20%); (4) relative humidity (23%, 54%, and 98%); and (5) temperature (13 °C, 20 °C, and 33 °C). Significant reductions in total fungal count and Fusarium spp. across all treatments were observed. Higher ozone concentrations and longer exposure times yielded greater reductions, with 100 ppm for 24 h achieving 99.2% and 98.2% reductions in total fungal count and Fusarium incidence, respectively. Grain germination exhibited a negative dose-dependent response but remained within recommended values. Ozone-treated barley preserved quality for 60 days in storage. Grain moisture content, relative humidity, and temperature did not significantly affect ozone's efficacy on fungi and grain germination. This study demonstrates ozone's efficacy against fungi while preserving barley germination, suggesting it as an eco-friendly fungicidal alternative.

Keywords

Fusarium, Fusarium incidence, Fusarium infection, Fusarium species, Fusarium spp, alternative, barley, barley germination, cereal grains, cereals, concentration, content, count, days, deactivation, degradation, dose-dependent response, economic losses, effect, effect of gaseous ozone, efficacy, exposure, exposure time, fungal counts, fungal infections, fungi, fungicidal effect, fungicide alternatives, fungicides, gaseous ozone, germination, grain, grain germination, grain moisture content, high ozone concentrations, high-moisture barley, humidity, incidence, infection, loss, malting barley, moisture content, negative dose-dependent response, ozone, ozone concentrations, ozone efficacy, quality, quality degradation, recommended values, reduction, relative humidity, response, species, spp, spring, spring malting barley, stability, storage, study, temperature, time, treatment, values

Funders

  • Innovation Fund Denmark

Data Provider: Digital Science