Effect of the irrigation regime on the susceptibility of pepper and tomato to post-harvest proliferation of Salmonella enterica

Article


Marvasi, M., George, A., Giurcanu, M., Hochmuth, G., Noel, J. and Teplitski, M. 2015. Effect of the irrigation regime on the susceptibility of pepper and tomato to post-harvest proliferation of Salmonella enterica. Food Microbiology. 46, pp. 139-144. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2014.07.014
TypeArticle
TitleEffect of the irrigation regime on the susceptibility of pepper and tomato to post-harvest proliferation of Salmonella enterica
AuthorsMarvasi, M., George, A., Giurcanu, M., Hochmuth, G., Noel, J. and Teplitski, M.
Abstract

Raw produce is increasingly recognized as a vehicle of human gastroenteritis. Non-typhoidal Salmonella, pathogenic Escherichia coli, and other human pathogens have been isolated from fruits and vegetables in the field and in the marketplace, which led to the hypothesis that these microbes can use plants as alternate hosts. However, environmental and physiological factors that facilitate persistence of these bacteria in the crop production environment and make produce more vulnerable to post-harvest contamination have not been fully delineated. This study tested the effect of irrigation regimes on the susceptibility of peppers and tomatoes to post-harvest proliferation of Salmonella. The experiments were carried out over three experimental seasons in two locations using seven strains of Salmonella. The irrigation regime per se did not affect susceptibility of tomatoes and peppers to post-harvest proliferation of Salmonella; however, in some of the seasons, irrigation regime-dependent differences were observed. Red peppers and tomatoes were more conducive to proliferation of Salmonella than green fruit in all seasons. Inter-seasonal differences were the strongest factors affecting proliferation of Salmonella in peppers.

KeywordsHuman pathogens, Irrigation regime, Produce safety
PublisherElsevier
JournalFood Microbiology
ISSN0740-0020
Publication dates
Online08 Aug 2014
Print01 Apr 2015
Publication process dates
Deposited06 May 2015
Accepted17 Jul 2014
Output statusPublished
Additional information

Available online 8 August 2014

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2014.07.014
LanguageEnglish
Place of publicationEngland
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