Title of article
Pathogenic micro-organisms in slaughterhouse sludge—a survey
Author/Authors
Fransen، نويسنده , , Nicoline G. and van den Elzen، نويسنده , , Annemieke M.G. and Urlings، نويسنده , , Bert A.P. and Bijker، نويسنده , , Peter G.H. and Notarbartolo-di-Sciara، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
12
From page
245
To page
256
Abstract
During slaughtering of animals and subsequent meat processing the process water used becomes polluted with organic matter of animal origin (i.e. protein and fat). This organic sludge is, in principle, a product suitable for animal feeding. To investigate the microbiological contamination level of sludge, raw sludge was collected at pig (n = 8) and poultry (n = 5) slaughterhouses. Both flocculated and aerobically activated sludge was monitored. Slaughterhouse sludge was heavily contaminated with Enterobacteriaceae (6.3–10.0 in log10Ngram dry matter) and enterococci (4.6–7.9). Clostridia were present in sludge at a level of 3.1–5.8 (in log10Ng DM). Salmonella was present in the sludge from all slaughterhouses examined. Yersinia enterocolitica serotypes O:3 and O:9 were found in sludge from seven out of thirteen slaughterhouses. The prevalence of Campylobacter jejuni/coli was higher in flocculated poultry sludge than in both flocculated pig sludge and aerobically activated pig sludge. Obviously, decontamination of the sludge is mandatory when it is to be applied as a feed constituent, to prevent bacterial cycles from occurring in livestock, as well as the spread of human pathogenic zoonoses like campylobacter, salmonella and yersinia, to minimize loss of protein quality by the microbial breakdown of amino acids and the formation of possible toxic metabolites in sludge during storage.
Keywords
Slaughterhouse sludge , Pathogenic micro-organisms
Journal title
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Record number
2107437
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