Carly Long, Md Shafiul Islam Rion, Corey Coe, Claire Suszynski, Reuben Adejumo, Joe Moritz, Annette Freshour, Cassandra Orndorff, Timothy Boltz, Lisa Jones, Cangliang Shen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Very small poultry producers in West Virginia are very interested in learning the antimicrobial activities of commercial vinegar water during post-harvest broiler processing. We aimed to 1) evaluate the efficacy of vinegar water against pathogens and surrogate bacteria during the chilling of broiler carcasses, and 2) evaluate the anti-bacterial efficacy of 0, 50, and 75% vinegar water against surrogate bacteria during chilling at the Mobile Poultry Processing Unit (MPPU) pilot plant facility. In Study I, fresh organic broiler carcasses were inoculated with Salmonella Typhimurium, Campylobacter jejuni, and Enterococcus faecium, followed by chilling in the refrigerated 0, 50%, and 75% vinegar water for 1 or 24 h. In Study II, the MPPU-processed fresh broiler carcasses were chilled for 24 h in 0, 50, and 75% vinegar, 5 ppm of chlorine, and 2.5% of lactic/citric acid blend solutions. The broiler carcasses were then processed with D/E neutralizing solution in a standard poultry sampling bag for 30 seconds, followed by spread-plating onto tryptic soy agar plus 200 ppm-nalidixic acid (TSA-NaL), Brucella, and Bile-esculin agars (BEA)-NaL for S. Typhimurium, C. jejuni, and E. faecium, respectively. TSA- and BEA-NaL were incubated at 35°C for 48 h, and the Brucella agars were incubated in a microaerophilic jar at 42°C for 48 h. Mixed model procedure in R-program (3 × 2 × 3 factorial design) was used for data analysis with a significance level of P=0.05. Results showed that chilling in 50 and 75% of vinegar water for 1 h reduced (P < 0.05) 0.76-1.85 and 1.46-2.00 log10 CFU/mL of S. Typhimurium and C. jejuni, and when the chilling time was extended to 24 h, the reductions increased to 1.20-2.52 and 1.8-2.27 log10 CFU/mL, respectively. E. faecium showed less reduction (0.2-0.7 log10CFU/mL, P < 0.05) than S. Typhimurium. MPPU pilot study showed that chilling in 50 and 75% vinegar water for 24 h reduced (P < 0.05) E. faecium by 3.29-3.64 log10CFU/mL. Results suggested that applying 50 or 75% of commercial vinegar water for chilling 24h is effective to control foodborne pathogens on broiler carcasses, and E. faecium is a promising Salmonella surrogate during post-harvest validation studies.
期刊介绍:
First self-published in 1921, Poultry Science is an internationally renowned monthly journal, known as the authoritative source for a broad range of poultry information and high-caliber research. The journal plays a pivotal role in the dissemination of preeminent poultry-related knowledge across all disciplines. As of January 2020, Poultry Science will become an Open Access journal with no subscription charges, meaning authors who publish here can make their research immediately, permanently, and freely accessible worldwide while retaining copyright to their work. Papers submitted for publication after October 1, 2019 will be published as Open Access papers.
An international journal, Poultry Science publishes original papers, research notes, symposium papers, and reviews of basic science as applied to poultry. This authoritative source of poultry information is consistently ranked by ISI Impact Factor as one of the top 10 agriculture, dairy and animal science journals to deliver high-caliber research. Currently it is the highest-ranked (by Impact Factor and Eigenfactor) journal dedicated to publishing poultry research. Subject areas include breeding, genetics, education, production, management, environment, health, behavior, welfare, immunology, molecular biology, metabolism, nutrition, physiology, reproduction, processing, and products.