Abstract
Manure belt poultry houses were widely used for egg production. However, reliable spatial distribution of airborne bacteria data from long-term on-farm monitoring in manure belt houses are scarce. In this study, the airborne bacteria were collected by the Andersen air microorganism sampler in a 4 tiers and an 8 tiers layer house, respectively. Results revealed that the airborne bacteria concentration range from 565 ± 247 CFU/m3 to 12,118 ± 883 CFU/m3 inside the 4 tiers poultry farmhouse and 459 ± 247 to 12,966 ± 884 CFU/m3 inside 8 tiers poultry farmhouse, respectively. The average airborne bacterial concentrations in the 4 and 8 tiers manure belt houses were 4,527 ± 2,509 and 5,489 ± 2,579 CFU/m3, respectively. Significant spatial variations of airborne bacteria concentration were observed for both houses. Spatial distribution of airborne bacteria concentration along the long axis direction can be divided into 3 regions: the low concentration region (<6,000 CFU/m3), the transition region (6,000-10,000 CFU/m3), and the high concentration region (>10,000 CFU/m3), and airborne bacteria concentration was symmetrically distributed along the short axis direction inside both houses. We used 5 and 3 sampling locations to assess the average and maximum airborne bacterial concentration inside the manure belt houses, respectively. The average airborne bacteria concentration of 3 sampling locations was closest to the maximum concentration of both houses. It is more useful to use 3 sampling locations to monitor the change of the maximum airborne bacterial concentration inside the manure belt houses.
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