Heat and lime-treatment as effective control methods for E. coli O157:H7 in organic wastes
Bioresource Technology 100(10): 2692-2698
Article 2009 English
Authors
LA
Lisa M. Avery
AW
A. Prysor Williams
KK
Ken Killham
Abstract
1 min read
Land-application of abattoir wastes is economically appealing and may provide an effective means of closing the nutrient cycling loop. This practise is constrained, however, by legislation which necessitates pre-treatment to remove pathogenic micro-organisms prior to land-spreading. Here we investigated whether heat-treatment or lime addition could eliminate Escherichia coli O157:H7 from three contrasting abattoir wastes. We found that treatment at 60°C for 10min effectively eradicated the organism while treatment for the same length of time at 50°C led to 2–4log reductions, but not a complete kill. Temperatures of 72°C induced waste solidification rendering its use impractical. The potential for re-growth in heat-treated and untreated wastes was also investigated. Survival was significantly greater in heat-treated wastes, although the difference was less than half a log unit in magnitude. This effect of heat-treatment on pathogen survival appeared to be ameliorated when wastes were mixed with soil. No viable E. coli O157:H7 cells were recovered from any waste after application of lime (CaO) at a rate of 10gl−1, even after enrichment. Our results indicate that pasteurisation-style or liming treatments may provide a suitable alternative method for reducing pathogen loads in abattoir wastes, so that they can be applied to land with minimal biological risk.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.