Imported soft cheeses like brie and feta
Listeria concerns mean that pregnant women shouldn't consume cheeses including brie, Camembert, Roquefort, feta, and Gorgonzola.
Prewashed and precut fruits and vegetables
Raw milk
Marler says raw milk "can be infected with all types of bacteria."
"Some argue that milk loses nutrients during pasteurization, but the risk from coli and other pathogens found in raw milk outweigh any possible benefits," he wrote on Food Safety News.
Raw juice
Raw, unpasteurized juice presents similar issues to raw milk.
"There's no benefit big enough to take away the risk of drinking products that can be made safe by pasteurization," Marler previously told Business Insider.
Raw or undercooked eggs
Eggs and products such as homemade Caesar salad dressing, mayonnaise, ice cream, custards, and hollandaise sauce have the potential to carry salmonella. In April, the FDA announced a recall of 206 million eggs over salmonella-contamination concerns.
Oysters, clams, and mussels
Marler says he has seen more foodborne illnesses linked to shellfish in the past five years than in the two preceding decades.
According to Marler, global warming is heating up oceans and allowing microbial growth to thrive, which encourages the spread of foodborne illnesses like norovirus and vibrio infections.
Smoked fish
Smoked seafood comes with listeria concerns, though canned and shelf-safe fish (such as tuna) is safe to eat. However, pregnant women and nursing mothers should avoid fish with high levels of mercury — not because of food-poisoning concerns, but because high mercury levels can harm brain development.
Home-canned food
Stick to professionally canned jams while pregnant, Marler says. Home-canned goods can contain botulism, or be contaminated with other ways, as DIY canning operations don't have the same safety regulations as professional enterprises.
Sprouts
Because sprouts are grown in standing water, they are a prime spot for bacteria such as salmonella to thrive. Sprout-related outbreaks are common, with more than 30 bacterial outbreaks— primarily related to salmonella and E. coli — happening in the past two decades.