Despite regulations set up to monitor the microbiological quality of shellfish in producing areas, shellfish-borne gastroenteritis outbreaks still occur. Indeed, oyster depuration practices that are efficient to eliminate bacteria, fail to eliminate human norovirus from oyster flesh. In order to evaluate the impact of seawater temperature on the elimination of norovirus particles from oysters, large batches of oysters were contaminated using raw sewage containing norovirus and subjected to depuration at 8°C or 18°C. Over the experiment, quantitative RT-qPCR showed a one-log decrease of norovirus (both genogroups combined) genome copies per gram of digestive tissue after 41 days for oysters depurated at 8°C and 24 days at 18°C. The decrease of norovirus (both genogroups combined) in two batches of field-contaminated oysters depurated for two weeks at 18°C was in the same range (21 and 23 days respectively). All experiments showed a difference in genomic decay between the two norovirus genogroups, with norovirus genogroup I being more persistent in March/April compared to April/May.
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