School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, Sydney Institute of Agriculture, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Lett Appl Microbiol. 2020 Aug;71(2):210-217. doi: 10.1111/lam.13302. Epub 2020 Jun 2.
The effects of soil type and temperature on the survival of a cocktail of five Salmonella enterica serotypes (Enteritidis, Infantis, Montevideo, Typhimurium and Zanzibar) in manure-amended soils under controlled laboratory conditions was assessed. Containers of clay loam or sandy soil, unaltered or amended with 2% (w/w) poultry manure, were inoculated with S. enterica (~5 log CFU per gram) and held at 5, 21 or 37°C for 6 weeks. Statistical analysis of the persistence of S. enterica identified a significant three-way interaction between soil type, manure amendment and temperature. Clay loam soils and lower temperatures tended to support S. enterica persistence over 6 weeks with only 1- and 2-log reductions respectively. In contrast, sand and higher temperatures resulted in a 4-log and either 3- to 4-log reductions respectively. Manure amendment had an overarching effect of reducing die-off of S. enterica in comparison with unamended soils. This study highlights that a large component of variation of the rate of S. enterica reduction in soils may be attributed to combinations of environmental factors, in particular, soil type and temperature. It further underscores the importance of risk management strategies and industry guidelines based on local data and that reflect the diversity of prevailing horticultural production environments. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The persistence of Salmonella enterica in soil environments was shown to be significantly influenced by a range of individual and interacting environmental effects, including temperature, soil type and amendment addition. This indicates that current horticultural food safety management systems which employ a uniform prescribed exclusion period between application of manure and time of harvest may be unfit for purpose under certain conditions by either underestimating or overestimating pathogen die-off. These findings support exclusion periods that account for a range of environmental factors including temperature, soil type and growing region that may be more appropriate to manage microbiological risks associated with soil which has been amended with manure.
在受控实验室条件下,评估了土壤类型和温度对鸡粪改良土壤中五种沙门氏菌血清型(肠炎、婴儿、蒙得维的亚、伤寒和桑给巴尔)混合物生存能力的影响。将粘土壤土或沙土容器,未经或用 2%(w/w)家禽粪便改良,用沙门氏菌 (~5 log CFU 每克) 接种,并在 5、21 或 37°C 下保持 6 周。对沙门氏菌持久性的统计分析确定了土壤类型、粪便改良和温度之间存在显著的三向相互作用。在 6 周内,粘土壤土土壤和较低温度倾向于支持沙门氏菌的持久性,仅分别减少 1-和 2-log。相比之下,沙子和较高温度导致 4-log 减少,或分别减少 3-4-log。与未改良土壤相比,粪便改良对沙门氏菌死亡有总体影响。本研究表明,土壤中沙门氏菌减少率的变化很大一部分可能归因于环境因素的组合,特别是土壤类型和温度。它进一步强调了基于当地数据并反映当前园艺生产环境多样性的风险管理策略和行业指南的重要性。研究的意义和影响:表明沙门氏菌在土壤环境中的持久性受到一系列单独和相互作用的环境影响的显著影响,包括温度、土壤类型和添加改良剂。这表明,目前采用的在施用粪便和收获之间规定统一排除期的园艺食品安全管理系统在某些情况下可能不适用,因为它要么低估要么高估病原体的死亡。这些发现支持考虑到一系列环境因素(包括温度、土壤类型和种植区域)的排除期,这些因素可能更适合管理与用粪便改良的土壤相关的微生物风险。