Abstract

Three Swiss fish farms, farming rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), and their affiliated smoking plants were analyzed for the presence of Listeria spp. 590 samples were collected from the farming environment (raceway water, sludge), faecal content and skin of the fish, fish during processing, and the processing environment. Listeria spp. were found at prevalences of 2·3% in plant A, 31·6% in plant B (mainly L. monocytogenes), and 13·8% in plant C (mainly L. innocua). This high contamination rate in plant B may be explained by the following facts: (i) farm B uses river water flowing through agricultural land; (ii) plant B rears fish in earth ponds instead of concrete ponds or raceways; (iii) fish from farm B had not been denied feed prior to slaughter; and (iv) total lack of regular mechanical and chemical cleaning in the fish farm B and processing plant B. In all three plants samples taken after smoking but before packaging did not contain Listeria spp., although in plant B and C the raw fish was contaminated. Hygienic defaults during packaging can lead to contaminated ready-to-eat products, detected in plant B (L. monocytogenes) and plant C (L. innocua) with one sample each. To minimize a possible health hazard to the consumer, it is of great importance to prevent postprocessing contamination of smoked fish. Finally, means of preventing Listeria contamination during farming, slaughtering, processing and storage are suggested.

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