Fake Kakadu plum powder identified
Following National Reconciliation Week, ANSTO is sharing research published recently in the journal Food Control that confirms fraudulent Kakadu plum extracts are in circulation online and in the international marketplace.
The Kakadu plum sector is an emerging Australian industry and is an important economic and cultural asset for Indigenous communities across northern Australia. The market value of Kakadu plum in Australia is expected to rise from $1.6 million to $3.5 million by 2025 due to its health benefits and versatility.
An approach to validate provenance developed by ANSTO and partners could be used to safeguard authentic Kakadu plum extracts and help protect the industry in the international marketplace.
Ongoing research in association with the Northern Australian Kakadu Plum Alliance (NAAKPA), which represents Aboriginal-owned producers in the Northern Territory and Western Australia, is enabling genuine producers to have oversight of the sector and protect the industry.
NAAKPA provided the genuine samples for the study, welcomed publication of the findings that confirmed suspicions and provided scientific evidence of fraudulent product in circulation in the international marketplace.
ANSTO has been generating distinct signatures, known as iso-elemental fingerprints, for individual growers in the Alliance. A fingerprint, based on the isotopic and elemental profile, is unique to a specific location and can vary even between adjacent harvest areas.
The data is being added to a reference database to help identify where fruit comes from in the future. The technology has also been used to validate extracts produced from their ingredient Kakadu plum fruits.
In this study, investigators used stable isotope analysis and X-ray fluorescence elemental profiling to evaluate the authenticity of 13 commercially available Kakadu plum powdered samples purchased online from Australian and overseas suppliers and compared them against four powdered samples directly provided by First Nations harvesters.
All the overseas supplied powders in the study were fakes, not derived from Kakadu plum.
Lead author Mariel Keaney was supervised by Prof of Environmental Sciences Neil Saintilan of Macquarie University, where she was studying, Prof Jes Sammut of UNSW, Dr Mazumder and the Food Provenance team at ANSTO.
“The application of science-based traceability method will help to protect the emerging Kakadu plum industry and ensure the benefits of commercialisation are enjoyed by First Nations communities,” said Paul Saeki, CEO, NAAKPA.
Read the full findings here.
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