By
Keryn Bruister Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- It looks like an average camper trailer from the
outside, but a new food safety lab at Mississippi State
University lets veterinary researchers find ways of reducing
bacteria in poultry. After
the first year of a three-year grant in excess of $1
million, MSU College of Veterinary Medicine professors Drs.
Robert Wills and Hart Bailey have begun collecting samples
from poultry farms across Mississippi and three other
states. They will sample chickens from 72 flocks four times
each to determine the best point to concentrate treatment
efforts to reduce Salmonella and Campylobacter in the
animals. "We can
measure Salmonella and Campylobacter in feed, chicks,
adults, litter and the air -- all over the continuum -- but
no one knows how they relate to the final outcome," said
Wills, CVM associate professor. "We want to find the most
efficient time to intervene in the production process to
reduce Salmonella and Campylobacter in the final
product." Along
the production chain, Bailey said researchers plan to divide
the poultry production and processing continuum into four
segments: breeder-hatchery, grow-out, transportation from
the farm to the plant and processing. They
will evaluate bacterial levels at the hatchery, the last
week before leaving the production house, when the birds
arrive at the processing plant, before the chill tank and
exiting the chill tank. "If a
primary point of contamination can be identified,
researchers can focus on that area to reduce the risk of
Salmonella," Wills said. "We can make a lot of commonsense
assumptions, but until we test them, any decisions we make
can be wasteful and nonproductive." Bailey
said the need for this sort of research increased when the
Food Safety and Inspection Service implemented the Hazard
Analysis Critical Control Point, or HACCP, regulations in
1998. Campylobacter is not regulated yet and testing is
difficult, but it is typically more common on broiler
carcasses than Salmonella. "We're
trying to determine the best place within the chain to do
intervention methods," said Bailey, CVM associate professor.
"We will test the samples for Salmonella, and we'll send
samples to Dr. Allen Byrd at the USDA Agricultural Research
Service's Food and Feed Safety Research Laboratory in Texas
to test for Campylobacter." Wills
and Bailey are spearheading the research effort funded by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In addition to
scientists and personnel from MSU-CVM, the multidisciplinary
research team includes people from MSU's Extension Service,
the USDA Agricultural Research Service and two different
poultry companies, Sanderson Farms and Peco Farms, operating
in nine processing plants "We
will examine risk factors in management decisions, in the
environment and in the production process," Wills said.
"Management decisions include issues such as stocking
density, how many flocks are on the litter before it is
changed and how much time passes in between flocks.
Environmental issues include things like the type of
ventilation or the type of water dispensers." The
samples will be taken and initial processing begun in a
mobile lab -- a used and converted 28-foot recreational
vehicle Wills and Bailey bought with funds from the food
safety grant. Wills said the idea of having a mobile lab
came from his days as a master's program student about 25
years ago at the University of Tennessee. "We
were out in the fields for a week at a time, and having the
lab right there would have made taking and testing samples
much easier and faster," Wills explained. "When Dr. Bailey
and I started thinking about this research project, we
agreed a mobile lab would be very beneficial to the research
project." Without
the mobile lab, which has been refurbished and houses an
incubator cabinet, refrigerator, sink and work areas, Bailey
said they would be conducting sample preparation from the
back of a pickup truck and transporting them to his CVM lab.
Another benefit is that the researchers will have a "home
base" of sorts during their stays at different processing
plants. "Sometimes
we have to get to a plant and start taking samples at 11
p.m., and we'll be there for eight or 10 hours," Bailey
said. "With the mobile lab, we'll have a convenient location
to collect and test samples." Bailey
credits the poultry industry's willingness to improve their
methods as a catalyst for this type of food safety
research. "Identifying
the factors that have an impact on the occurrence of the
bacteria in broilers will benefit the poultry industry,
allowing them to continue to meet food safety standards and
produce a good quality product," Bailey said, adding that
heat readily kills these bacteria, and the final defense
against any food-borne illness is proper handling by the end
user. He
added that with the increased awareness concerning homeland
security, one new emphasis in veterinary medicine is in the
area of crisis management and disaster response. The mobile
lab will also be a resource that could allow CVM to address
these issues in the future if on-site response is ever
needed. Released:
Jan. 15, 2004
Animal
Health
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MSU mobile
poultry lab gives unique opportunity
Contact: Dr. Hart Bailey, (662) 325-7726
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:49
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm04/040115.html
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