Six culinary plant compounds offer a resistance-proof defense against feed mold
Namgyel W, Tandee K, Chatsungnoen T, Bhuyar P
Medicinal Plants
The thyme, cinnamon, and turmeric you grow or cook with produce the same compounds researchers now rank highest for replacing failing synthetic antifungals that contaminate up to 80% of the world's livestock feed.
Molds contaminating animal feed produce toxins that travel up the food chain into meat, eggs, and dairy. Scientists reviewed how compounds extracted from familiar herbs like thyme, cloves, cinnamon, and turmeric attack mold through five different routes at once, making it much harder for fungi to evolve resistance than when a single chemical drug is used. They also created scoring systems to help producers choose and combine these plant extracts in ways that actually work outside the lab.
Key Findings
60-80% of global feed commodities are contaminated by toxin-producing fungi, causing multi-billion-dollar losses annually through animal illness, reduced productivity, and food chain carry-over.
Engaging five simultaneous antifungal mechanisms (membrane disruption, mycotoxin-gene silencing, oxidative stress, enzyme interference, and signal-transduction blockade) makes resistance evolution geometrically less probable than single-target synthetic drugs.
Six plant compounds scored highest on a six-criteria readiness model: thymol (thyme), eugenol (cloves), cinnamaldehyde (cinnamon), citral (lemongrass), curcumin (turmeric), and resveratrol (grapes).
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers propose a structured framework for replacing synthetic antifungals in livestock feed with plant-derived compounds like thymol, cinnamaldehyde, and curcumin. By targeting fungi through five simultaneous biological pathways, these plant extracts make resistance evolution far less likely than single-drug treatments, while scoring tools help producers select and combine them for real-world use.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
A multi-barrier defence strategy using plant-derived antifungals against mycotoxigenic fungi in livestock feed.
Mycotoxigenic fungi, principally Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium spp. contaminate 60-80% of global feed commodities and cause multi-billion-dollar losses through animal health impairment, re...
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Thyme is a culinary herb consisting of the dried aerial parts of some members of the genus Thymus of flowering plants in the mint family Lamiaceae. Thymes are native to Eurasia and North Africa. Thymes have culinary, medicinal, and ornamental uses. The species most commonly cultivated and used fo...