Abstract

Many foodborne outbreaks of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 infection have been associated with the consumption of contaminated vegetables. On-farm contaminations through contaminated manure or irrigation water application were considered likely sources of the pathogen for several outbreaks. Field studies were done to determine the survival of E. coli O157:H7 on two subterranean crops (carrots and onions), and in soil fertilized with contaminated manure compost or irrigated with contaminated water. Three different types of composts, PM-5 (poultry manure compost), 338 (dairy manure compost) and NVIRO-4 (alkaline stabilized dairy manure compost), and irrigation water were inoculated with an avirulent strain of E. coli O157:H7 at 107cfug−1 and 105cfuml−1, respectively. A split-plot block design plan was used for each crop, with five treatments (one without compost, three with each of the three composts, and one without compost but with contaminated irrigation water applied) and five replicates for a total of 25 plots, each measuring 1.8×4.6m2, for each crop. Composts were applied to soil as a strip at a rate of 4.5 metric tonsha−1 before carrots and onions were sown. Contaminated irrigation water was sprayed once on the vegetables at the rate of 2l per plot for this treatment 3 weeks after carrots and onions were sown. E. coli O157:H7 survived in soil samples for 154–196 days, and was detected for 74 and 168 days on onions and carrots, respectively. E. coli O157:H7 survival was greatest in soil amended with poultry compost and least in soil containing alkaline-stabilized dairy manure compost. Survival profiles of E. coli O157:H7 on vegetables and soil samples, contaminated either by application of contaminated compost or irrigation water, were similar. Hence, preharvest contamination of carrots and onions with E. coli O157:H7 for several months can occur through both contaminated manure compost and irrigation water.

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