Plant-Scale Validation of Physical Heat Treatment of Poultry Litter Composts Using Surrogate and Indicator Microorganisms for Salmonella

This study selected and used indicator and surrogate microorganisms for to validate the processes for physically heat-treated poultry litter compost in litter processing plants. Initially laboratory validation studies indicated that 1.2- to 2.7-log or more reductions of desiccation-adapted NRRL B-23...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2021-03, Vol.87 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Hongye, Chen, Zhao, Dharmasena, Muthu, Greene, Annel K, Gardener, Brian McSpadden, Holden, Blaize, Jiang, Xiuping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study selected and used indicator and surrogate microorganisms for to validate the processes for physically heat-treated poultry litter compost in litter processing plants. Initially laboratory validation studies indicated that 1.2- to 2.7-log or more reductions of desiccation-adapted NRRL B-2354 were equivalent to > 5-log reductions of desiccation-adapted Senftenberg 775/W in poultry litter compost, depending on treatment conditions and compost types. Plant validation studies were performed in one turkey litter compost processor and one laying hen litter compost processor. was inoculated at ca.7 log CFU g into the turkey litter compost and at ca. 5 log CFU g into laying hen litter compost with respectively targeted moisture contents. The thermal processes in the two plants yielded 2.8 - > 6.4 log CFU g (> 99.86%) reductions of the inoculated. Similarly, for the processing control samples, reductions of presumptive indigenous enterococci were in the order of 1.8-3.7 log CFU g (98.22% to 99.98%) of the total naturally present. In contrast, there were less reductions of indigenous mesophiles (1.7-2.9 log CFU) and thermophiles (0.4-3.2 log CFU g ). More indigenous enterococci were inactivated in the presence of higher moisture in the poultry litter compost. Based on the data collected under the laboratory conditions, the processing conditions in both plants were adequate to reduce any potential contamination of processed poultry litter compost by at least 5 logs, even though the processing conditions varied among trials and plants. Poultry litter compost, commonly used as a biological soil amendment, is subjected to a physical heat-treatment in industry setting to reduce pathogenic bacteria such as and produce a dry product. According to the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) Produce Safety Rule, the thermal process for poultry litter compost should be scientifically validated to satisfy the microbial standard requirement. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first validation study in commercial poultry litter compost processing plants, and our results indicated that levels, if present, could be reduced by at least 5 logs based on the reductions of surrogate and indicator microorganisms, even though the processing conditions in these commercial plants varied greatly. Furthermore, both indicator and surrogate microorganisms along with the custom-designed sampler can serve as practical tools for poultry litter compost processors to routinely mon
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/AEM.02234-20