Research
The control layer batching discipline deserves
Why mycotoxin control belongs in the routine, not the emergency drawer.
Mycotoxins are not an occasional visitor to the feed mill they are a background condition. Treating their control as an emergency response, rather than a standing part of the batching routine, is the mistake worth designing out.
A risk that never leaves
Raw materials carry mycotoxins in quantities that vary with harvest, storage and season. Because the load is invisible and inconsistent, the temptation is to react only when a problem surfaces in performance or health by which point the cost has already been paid.
Routine beats reaction
The discipline that protects a feed mill is the same one that protects any process: build the control into the routine so it happens every time, not just when someone remembers. A broad-spectrum binder in every relevant batch turns mycotoxin control from a fire drill into a standing safeguard.
That is also how our FRAME quality system treats it aflatoxin monitoring and adulteration checks are scheduled records, not ad-hoc responses. A binder in the batch is the natural extension of that thinking into the finished feed.
Broad-spectrum by design
Because the mix of toxins is never fixed, control has to be broad rather than targeted at one culprit. MycoACT is built to adsorb across the spectrum, protecting intake, health and performance whatever the season delivered.
The product behind this MycoACT® See the evidence→