Friday, December 26, 2014

Feedlots spread E. coli.

E. coli from feedlots spreads much further than food safety investigators have expected.

Trials by a microbiology team revealed that breezes can carry the bacteria at least 180 meters from feedlots.

That means produce growers need to keep their crops further from feedlots.

The trials were run at distances of 60, 120 and 180 meters, and although fewer travelled the longer distances, some made it to all three collection sites.

The highly risky strain, E. coli 0157:H7, was among the strains that went as far as 180 meters.

That strain has sickened thousands and killed scores of consumers across North America, including the sensational case of poisoned water in the municipal distribution system at Walkerton, Ont. in 2000. About 2,300 people were sickened and seven died in that case; the water was probably polluted by cattle manure running into the river or wells after a heavy spring rainstorm.

The new study has been published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

Lead author of the study is Elaine Berry, a researcher at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Meat Animal Research Center at Clay Center, Nebraska. 

In each of two years, leafy greens were planted to nine plots located 60, 120, and 180 meters from a cattle feedlot (three plots at each distance). Leafy greens (270) and feedlot manure samples (100) were collected six different times from June to September in each year.

Both E. coli O157:H7 and total E. coli were recovered from leafy greens at all plot distances, the team reports.

E. coli O157:H7 was recovered from 3.5 percent of leafy green samples per plot at 60 meters, which was higher than the 1.8 percent of positive samples per plot at 180 meters, indicating a decrease in contamination as distance from the feedlot was increased.

Although E. coli O157:H7 was not recovered from air samples at any distance, total E. coli was recovered from air samples at the feedlot edge and all plot distances, indicating that airborne transport of the pathogen can occur.


Until this research, most assumed the feedlot risk was from manure applied to fields or runoff into water used to irrigate crops.