ABSTRACT
This study was done to isolate, identify and enumerate bacteria isolates from livestock feed (poultry feeds) in MOUAU poultry farm. Poultry feeds which included starter, grower, finisher and layer were examined using spread plate techniques. The culture media used were Nutrient Agar, MacConkey Agar and Salmonella – Shigella Agar (SSA). The results indicated the presence of bacteria in the poultry feed samples from MOUAU poultry farm. The bacterial count ranged from 1.68×106 to 2.61×106, 1.52×106 to 2.45×106, 1.63×106 to 2.16×106 in total heterotrophic plate count, total coliform count and total Salmonella Shigella count respectively. The genera of bacterial isolated and their percentage occurrence were Staphylococcus aureus (23.52%), Escherichia coli (23.52%), Shigella spp (11.76%), Serratia spp (17.68%), Klebsiella spp (5.88%), Bacillus spp (5.88%), Salmonella spp (11.76%).The poultry feeds analysed in the hereby study contained high counts of bacteria. Absolute quality control measures should be adhered to in the poultry feed producing industries to ensure that raw materials used in preparing feeds are free from microbial contamination. It is recommended that poultry feeds should be made from good quality grains and it should be prevented from environmental or other contamination.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Pages
Title
page i
Certification ii
Acknowledgments iv
Table
of contents v
List
of tables viii
Abstract ix
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 Introduction 1
1.2 General
Objective of the Study 6
1.3 Specific
Aims of the Study 6
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 Literature Review
7
2.1 Overview
of Livestock Feed 7
2.1.1 Feed
Preparation and Quality 9
2.1.2 Feed
Formulation for Poultry 10
2.2 The
Livestock Feed Industry 12
2.3 Responsibilities
and Legislation 13
2.4 Evidence That Poultry Feed Is Frequently
Contaminated With Bacterial Pathogens 4
2.5 Evidence That Contaminated Poultry Feed
Results in Infection or Colonization of Poultry Birds 14
2.6 Evidence That Consumption of Infected or
Colonized Food Livestock and Their Products Results In Human Illness 15
2.7 Outbreaks of Human Salmonella Infections
Traced To Contaminated Livestock (Poultry) Feed 16
2.8 Significance
of Salmonella Contamination of
Livestock Feed For Human Foodborne Illness
18
2.9 Addressing Safe Livestock Feed In Nigeria 20
CHAPTER THREE
3.0
Materials and Methods 22
3.1 Materials 22
3.1.1 Media Used 22
3.1.2 Reagent 22
3.1.3 Sterilization of Material 22
3.2 Collection of Sample 22
3.2.1 Preparation of Media
Used 22
3.3
Isolation of Bacteria from Poultry Feed Samples 23
3.3.1 Assessment and Enumeration of Bacteria
from Poultry Feed Samples 23
3.4 Identification of Bacterial
Isolates. 23
3.4.1 Gram
Staining 23
3.4.2
Motility Test 24
3.4.3 Biochemical
Tests 24
3.4.4
Carbohydrate Fermentation 27
3.5
Determination of Percentage Occurrence of Bacterial Isolates 28
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0 Results 29
CHAPTER FIVE
5.0 Discussion, Recommendation and
Conclusion 34
5.1
Discussion 34
5.2 Conclusion 35
5.3 Recommendation 35
References
LIST OF TABLES
TABLE TITLE PAGE
4.1: Total
viable bacterial count from poultry feed samples 30
4.2 Identification
and characterization of bacterial isolates from poultry feed samples 31
4.3: Distribution of bacterial isolates from
poultry feed samples 32
4.4: Percentage occurrence of bacterial isolates
from poultry feed samples from MOUAU poultry farm 33
CHAPTER ONE
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Livestock feeds are blended or processed products of
plant and animal origin whose principal purpose is to meet animal’s nutritional
needs. Ingredients used in livestock feeds include grains, cereals, meat and
meat by-products and food by-products. A number of feed and feed ingredients
are imported and feeds are often produced as processed finished or compound
feeds. Livestock feeds include those for livestock (including horses, cattle,
sheep, goats, pigs, fish, rabbits and poultry) and companion animals (including
cats and dogs). Livestock feed may serve as a substrate for a wide variety of
microorganisms (Stotzky, 1997; Israel, Sunday, Mansong and Ubong, 2016). Some
of the micro-flora are adapted to the desiccated conditions in soil and are
transferred by insects; dust and wind to similar niche bacterial. They are
capable of degrading organic matter and/or exist in a survival state until the
moisture is high enough for bacterial action. While other microorganisms,
primary moulds, actively grow within stored seeds including the low amount of
available moisture as substrates (Crump et
al., 2002).
Poultry feeds are good and nourishing food supplements
with varying constituents of, among others, animal and vegetable proteins,
cereals, essential amino acids, minerals, salts, antibiotics, vitamin pre-mix
and antioxidants. Since commercial poultry feeds and feed ingredients are usually
sourced from various locations, they remain the major vehicles for the
introduction of both commensal and pathogenic microbes to the farm environment
(Okoli et al., 2005). During the past
decades, livestock industry in Nigeria grew at the rate of 20% per annum
(Boddington, 2007) and nowadays, it is one of the fastest growing agro-based
enterprises in the country (FEB, 2015). About 18.6% of the GDP comes from the
agricultural sector, and one third of which is from the livestock industry,
where a large number of private-owned companies produce livestock feeds of
varying standards (Khan, 2008).
The chemical and nutritional constituents of poultry
feeds are important for poultry nutrition and growth, but are only part of the
livestock feed matrix. From an ecological standpoint, harvested grains are not
only ingredients for poultry diet, but can act as substrate and transmission
vector for simple unicellular prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Feed may
contain diverse microflora that is acquired from multiple environmental
sources, including dust, soil, water and insects. Feed materials may be
inoculated at any time during growing, harvesting, processing, storage and
dispersal of the feed. According to Maciorowski et al., (2004), microflora found in feed materials may come from a
variety of ecological niches, which may include soil and gastrointestinal
tracts, and have to adapt to the conditions found in animal feed and feed
components in order to survive. The microbial diversity found in different
feeds is dependent on the water activity, oxygen tension, pH and nutrient
composition of the feed matrix. Microflora can decrease grain value through
nutritional changes, physical damage or the production of toxins deleterious to
animal health.
For the purpose of this report, poultry feeds will
refer to finished feeds or compound feeds, including blended and mash type
feeds, but exclude pasture-based feeds and those for pet food. The majority of
finished feed manufactured in Nigeria is produced to meet the requirements of
commercial poultry production. In recent years, there has been a
diversification in feed ingredients available and feeding practices in Nigeria.
For example, there has been an increased use of compound feeds in the dairy
industry, reflecting the rapid growth and intensification in that sector. In
addition, there is a growing range of imported feed and feed ingredients
entering Nigeria from a variety of overseas sources, which poses an additional
risk for the introduction of pathogens and contaminates into the food chain
(Cressey et al., 2011; Davidson and
Pearson, 2009a).
More than 27 different species of bacteria have been
isolated from normal, ready to cook, poultry meat a large number of
publications incriminate poultry as origin of food-borne infection out-breaks.
All four basic types of poultry feeds viz., starters,
growers, finishers and layers, may potentially become contaminated with food
borne pathogenic microbes during harvesting, processing, handling, and
marketing of the bagged feeds (Chowdhuri, 2011). Prominent bacterial species in
the livestock feeds include Bacillus, Escherichia, Salmonella, Enterococcus,
Campylobacter, Clostridium and Lactobacillus that have been shown to be of
critical importance in country like Nigeria ( Hossain et al.,2014) and of microbial infections in poultry include
contaminated feeds, drinking water elsewhere in the world (Buchannan et al.,1985). Several studies have
demonstrated that the sources, utensils, personnel, human wastes, rodents and
hatchery related unhygienic activities (Okonkwo et al., 2010). Recently, poultry feeds have been implicated in
several poultry diseases of viral, bacterial and fungal origin, suggesting that
such feeds can potentially act as carriers for human as well as animal
pathogens (Mohanta et al ., 2016).
Moreover, poultry environment like soil and drinking water, faeces, litters and
wastes (Igbinosa, 2014), live, moribund and dead chickens , meat, carcass,
viscera, eggs, and poultry by-products (Hossain et al.,2008) could also carry microbes of public and veterinary
health importance.
Salmonella remains the pathogen of focus in poultry
feed due to the organisms’ ability to infect food-producing birds and thereby
potentially contributing to human foodborne disease (Cressey et al., 2011; Crump et al., 2002; Sapkota et al.,
2007). Salmonella Agona infections in humans in the United States (US)
and countries within the European Union (EU) have been traced to contaminated
poultry feed (Crump et al., 2002). In
New Zealand, an increase in human cases of Salmonella Typhimurium DT1
was observed following an incident where contaminated animal feed (fish meal)
was fed to poultry (Wong, 2003).
Modern production facilities for poultry tend to be
large and intensive. A very large number of poultry are maintained in each
production unit. Under these conditions, it is nearly impossible to present the
spread of a microorganism (such as Salmonella,
Listeria, and Campylobacter) are
aimed, inter-alias, towards prevention of the infection or colonization of the
livestock on the farm by various means of inhibiting possible entrances of
disease producing agents into the farm. High priority is given to
decontamination of livestock feed, since all means employed to prevent
infection will fail unless a supply of decontaminated feed is ensured.
The role of poultry feed as a vector of pathogenic
microorganisms; in particular Salmonella has been well documented in the
literature of the last decades, (Lapidot 1998). Feed ingredients of animals’
origin, such as fish meal, meat and bone meats, slaughter ofals and feather
meals are reported to be usually contaminated. However, ingredients of plant
origin, such as oil-seed lake meals, are also reported to be contaminated,
albeit at a relatively lower frequency.
Therefore, the aims of the present study is to
investigate the isolation and identification of bacteria found in livestock
(Poultry) feed gotten from MOUAU poultry farm.
1.2 Statement
of Problem
The presence of the bacteria in all the poultry feed
calls for attention in the storage strategies employed by the poultry feed
manufacturers, the ware house condition, distributors and the sellers. In
recent years, with the increasing in density of poultry and infectious diseases
in poultry caused by pathogenic bacteria, the healthy development of the
poultry industry is facing serious threat. These result in lower feed
conversion rates, the declining in egg laying rates of hens as well as
fertilization rates, slower growth, the increasing rejection rates of dead
chickens and even a large number of deaths.
Air tight storage of the various feeds is not
advisable because offensive odour might result when there is prevention of
outflow and inflow of air (Leonard, 1981). The condition of feed storage and
handling could be a source of contamination. When feeds are unhygienically
handled and stored, there could be a build-up of microbial contaminants.
Poor management of farming, overcrowding, dirty
sanitation environment, bad ventilation, poor feed quality and stress can cause
birds to infect with diseases. Therefore, how to take effective measures to
prevent and control infectious diseases from birds is the most important task.
Poultry feed is known to contain Salmonella and other microorganisms (Lapidot, 2011). It is
therefore pertinent to carry out microbiological examination of commercially
prepared poultry feeds to ascertain their safety to birds.
1.5. General
Objective of the Study
The general objective of the study involves the
Isolation, Identification and Enumeration of Bacteria found in Poultry feed.
1.6 Specific aims of The Study
The present study was aimed to investigate the
following aspects:
a)
To isolate bacteria and to determine the total viable
bacterial count from livestock (poultry) feed.
b)
To identify the bacteria isolated from the livestock (poultry)
feed.
c)
To determine the percentage occurrence of bacterial isolates
in livestock (poultry) feed.
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