Abstract:
Deoxynivalenol (DON), also known as vomitoxin, was prevalent in the 2009 U.S.
corn crop and subsequently present in dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS), in
which DON levels are about 3 times higher than the original corn source. One method
shown to reduce DON levels was by increasing moisture and temperature when sodium
bisulfite was added to DON-contaminated corn (Young et al., 19874). Therefore, a pilot
study aimed first to replicate these results by placing DON-contaminated DDGS in an
autoclave (60 min at 250°F) in the presence of sodium metabisulfite (SMB). The study
used 6 treatments: (1) control, (2) 0.5% SMB, (3) 1.0% SMB, (4) 2.5% SMB, (5) 5.0%
SMB, and (6) 5.0% SMB with 100 mL/kg water added to evaluate the role of water.
After drying, samples were analyzed at North Dakota State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (NDSU; Fargo, ND). Autoclaving reduced DON levels (R2 = 0.99)
with increasing SMB, justifying a follow-up study that aimed to assess whether SMB has
the same detoxifying effects on corn DDGS in a commercial pellet mill.
For this study, batches of 450 lb DDGS were prepared from DDGS with a known
DON concentration (23.4 ppm). The pellet mill was set to a production rate of 1,000
lb/h so retention rate and conditioning temperature could be altered within each batch.
Within each batch, 4 samples were collected at conditioning temperatures of 150 and
180°F and retention times of 30 and 60 sec within each temperature. Samples were
sent to NDSU for full mycotoxin analysis. No differences (P > 0.15) were found in
conditioning temperature or retention time on total DON, DON, or acetyl-DON;
however, pelleting DDGS reduced (quadratic; P < 0.01) DON and total DON as SMB
increased. Based on these results, the reduction in DON and total DON levels appear
to plateau somewhere between SMB levels of 2.5 and 5.0%. These results imply that
pelleting in combination with SMB may allow pork producers to utilize DON-contaminated DDGS more effectively, but additional research is required to determine the
effect of pelleting SMB in DON-contaminated diets on growth performance of pigs.