Department of Food Science, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, 65 Dudley Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, United States of America.
Citrus Research and Education Center, University of Florida, IFAS, 700 Experiment Station Rd, Lake Alfred, FL 33850, United States of America.
Int J Food Microbiol. 2020 Mar 2;316:108480. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2019.108480. Epub 2019 Dec 13.
Tomatoes have been linked to Salmonella outbreaks in the United States (US). Plasticulture systems, that combine raised beds, plastic mulch, drip irrigation and fumigation, are common in commercial staked fresh tomato production in the US. The US FDA Produce Safety Rule prohibits the distribution of any produce covered by the rule (including fresh market tomatoes) that drops to the ground before harvest. This research was undertaken to better characterize the risks posed by tomatoes that touch plastic mulch or soil immediately before or during harvest. Research was conducted in three states (Florida, Maryland, and Ohio). Each state utilized tomatoes from their state at the point of harvest maturity most common in that state. Each state used indigenous soil and plastic mulch for transfer scenarios. New plastic mulch obtained directly from the application roll and used plastic mulch that had been present on beds for a growing season were evaluated. A five-strain cocktail of Salmonella enterica isolates obtained from tomato outbreaks was used. Mulch (new or used), soil, or tomatoes were spot inoculated with 100 μl of inoculum to obtain a final population of ~6 log CFU/surface. Items were either touched to each other immediately (1-2 s) after inoculation (wet contact) or allowed to dry at ambient temperature for 1 h or 24 h (dry contact). All surfaces remained in brief (1-5 s) or extended (24 h) contact at ambient temperature. Transfer of Salmonella between a tomato and plastic mulch or soil is dependent on contact time, dryness of the inoculum, type of soil, and contact surface. Transfer of Salmonella to and from the mulch and tomatoes for wet and 1 h dry inocula were similar with mean log % transfers varying from 0.7 ± 0.2 to 1.9 ± 0.1. The transfer of Salmonella between soil or plastic mulch to and from tomatoes was dependent on moisture with wet and 1 h dry inocula generally yielding significantly (p < 0.05) higher transfer than the 24 h dry inoculum. Results indicate that harvesting dry tomatoes significantly (p < 0.05) reduces the risk of contamination from soil or mulch contact. Transfer to tomatoes was generally significantly greater (p < 0.05) from new and used plastic mulch than from soil. If contamination and moisture levels are equivalent and contact times are equal to or <24 h before harvest, significantly (p < 0.05) more Salmonella transfers to tomatoes from mulch than from soil. Our findings support that harvesting tomatoes from soil has similar or lower risk than harvesting from plastic mulch.
西红柿已被美国(US)的沙门氏菌爆发事件联系起来。在塑料栽培系统中,将抬高的床、塑料覆盖物、滴灌和熏蒸结合使用,是美国商业种植新鲜番茄的常见方法。美国 FDA 农产品安全法规禁止任何受该法规覆盖的农产品(包括新鲜市场上的西红柿)在收获前掉落到地上。本研究旨在更好地描述在收获前或收获期间立即接触塑料覆盖物或土壤的西红柿所带来的风险。研究在三个州(佛罗里达州、马里兰州和俄亥俄州)进行。每个州都使用了在该州最常见的处于收获成熟点的西红柿。每个州都使用了本州的土壤和塑料覆盖物进行转移情景模拟。评估了直接从应用卷上获得的新塑料覆盖物和已在床中使用了一个生长季节的旧塑料覆盖物。使用了从番茄疫情中分离得到的五株沙门氏菌属分离株的鸡尾酒。用 100 μl 接种物对覆盖物(新的或旧的)、土壤或西红柿进行点接种,以获得最终约 6 log CFU/表面的种群。在接种后立即(1-2 秒)将物品彼此接触(湿接触),或者在环境温度下干燥 1 小时或 24 小时(干接触)。所有表面都在环境温度下保持短暂(1-5 秒)或长时间(24 小时)接触。在番茄和塑料覆盖物或土壤之间,沙门氏菌的转移取决于接触时间、接种物的干燥程度、土壤类型和接触表面。湿接种物和 1 小时干燥接种物的沙门氏菌从覆盖物到番茄和从番茄到覆盖物的转移情况相似,平均转移百分比从 0.7±0.2 到 1.9±0.1 不等。土壤或塑料覆盖物与番茄之间的沙门氏菌转移取决于水分,湿接种物和 1 小时干燥接种物的转移通常明显(p<0.05)高于 24 小时干燥接种物。结果表明,干燥的番茄收获显著(p<0.05)降低了与土壤或覆盖物接触的污染风险。与土壤相比,从新的和旧的塑料覆盖物转移到番茄的情况通常显著(p<0.05)更高。如果污染水平和水分水平相同,且在收获前的接触时间等于或<24 小时,那么从覆盖物转移到番茄的沙门氏菌明显(p<0.05)多于从土壤转移。我们的研究结果表明,从土壤中收获西红柿的风险与从塑料覆盖物中收获西红柿的风险相似或更低。