ABSTRACT
This study was conducted to isolate of microorganisms associated with different poultry feeds in Umuahia Metropolis. A total of thirty-six (36) feed samples were collected from different feed types (starter, grower, finisher and layers feed) and five (5) different organisms were isolated which include; Salmonella sp 13(33.3), Staphylococcus aureus 10(25.6%), Bacillus spp 7(17.9%), Proteus sp 4(10.3) and Escherichia coli 5(12.8%). Salmonella sp was the most frequently isolated organism as it has the highest percentage of occurrence, followed by Staphylococcus aureus (25.6%), Bacillus sp (17.9%), Escherichia coli (12.8%) and Proteus sp (10.3%). The viable counts of samples tested indicated that feed samples from rainbow feed were mostly loaded with bacteria (8.7x106 cfu/g of feed, in average), followed by samples from vital feed (5.9 x106 cfu/g of feed, in average) and the least loaded were those from top feeds (5.0 x106 cfu/g of feed, in average). Sensitivity test was carried out and most of the isolates were sensitive to ofloxacin (30µg), followed by gentamicin (10µg), imipinem (25µg), Nitrofurantoin (30µg) and resistant to Augmentin (30µg), Cefexime (30µg), cefotaxime (30µg) and Cefuroxime (30µg). From the result of this study, it is necessary to evaluate a feed safety by bacteriological examination of imported poultry feed to ensure safety and quality of feed to prevent poultry diseases and great economic losses.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
S/N
|
TITLE
|
PAGE3
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1
|
Title Page
|
I
|
2
|
Certification
|
Ii
|
3
|
Dedication
|
Iii
|
4
|
Acknowledgement
|
Iv
|
5
|
Table of Contents
|
v
|
6
|
List of Tables
|
vii
|
7
|
Abstract
|
viii
|
|
CHAPTER ONE
|
|
2.0
|
Literature Review
|
4
|
2.1
|
Bacterial Contamination
of Imported Poultry Feed In Iraq
|
4
|
2.2
|
Salmonella Prevalence in the Poultry
Feed Industry in Pakistan
|
5
|
2.3
|
Isolation and Identification of Escherichia Coli
and Salmonella
From Poultry Litter and
Feed
|
6
|
2.4
|
Bacteria Contaminating Poultry Feeds
|
7
|
2.4.1
|
Salmonella
|
9
|
2.4.2
|
Salmonella contamination of poultry
feed
|
10
|
2.4.3
|
Escherichia coli
|
11
|
2.4.4
|
Klebsiella species
|
11
|
2.4.5
|
Proteus species
|
11
|
2.4.6
|
Hafnia alvei
|
12
|
2.4.7
|
Bacillus species
|
12
|
2.4.7.1
|
Bacillus megaterium
|
12
|
2.4.7.2
|
Bacillus mycoides
|
13
|
2.4.7.3
|
Bacillus lentus
|
13
|
2.4.8
|
Staphylococcus species
|
13
|
2.4.8.1
|
Staphylococcus aureus
|
13
|
2.9
|
Streptococcus species
|
14
|
2.9.1
|
Streptococcus pyogenes
|
14
|
2.5
|
Sources of contamination
|
14
|
2.5.1
|
Ingredient contamination
|
14
|
2.5.2
|
Storage (temperature and humidity)
|
15
|
2.5.3
|
Handling and transportation
|
15
|
3.0
3.1
|
CHAPTER THREE
Materials and Methods
Materials
|
16
16
|
3.1.1
|
Collection of Samples
|
16
|
3.1.2
|
Methods
|
16
|
3.2
|
Sterilization of
Materials
|
16
|
3.2.1
|
Culture Media Preparation
|
16
|
3.2.2
|
Inoculation and
Isolation
|
16
|
3.2.3
|
Colony Counts of
Isolated Microorganisms
|
17
|
3.2.4
|
Purification of Isolates
|
17
|
3.2.5
|
Identification of the
Isolates
|
17
|
3.2.6
|
Gram Staining
|
18
|
3.2.7
|
Biochemical Test
|
18
|
3.2.7.1
|
Catalase Test
|
18
|
3.2.7.2
|
Indole Test
|
18
|
3.2.7.3
|
Citrate Utilization Test
|
19
|
3.2.7.4
|
Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S)
Production Test
|
19
|
3.2.7.5
|
Starch Hydrolysis
|
19
|
3.2.7.6
|
Motility, Indole, Urease
(MIU)
|
20
|
3.2.7.7
|
Coagulase Test
|
20
|
3.2.7.8
|
Oxidase Test
|
21
|
3.2.8
|
Antibiotic
Susceptibility Testing
|
21
|
|
CHAPTER FOUR
|
|
4.0
|
Result
|
22
|
|
CHAPTER FIVE
|
|
5.0
|
Discussion, Conclusion
and Recommendation
|
27
|
5.1
|
Discussion
|
27
|
5.2
|
Conclusion
|
29
|
5.3
|
Recommendation
|
29
|
|
References
|
30
|
LIST
OF TABLES
TABLE
|
TITLE
|
PAGE
|
1
|
Mean bacterial load from
the various feed samples
|
23
|
2
|
Colonial morphology and
biochemical characteristics of the isolates
|
34
|
3
|
Percentage occurrence of
the isolates
|
25
|
4
|
Antibiotics
susceptibility profile of the isolates
|
26
|
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
The
safety and quality of poultry feeds are great subject in developed countries,
that feed safety is an essential requirement for all animals. Unsafe feed may
also causes great economic losses because of destroying an infected flock of
birds (Watkins et al., 2003) There is
a proof that poultry feed is often infected with food-borne pathogenic
bacteria. Type of feed processing and storage conditions are the factors that
have an effect on the population levels and types of micro-organisms in the
feed. Since long time has been known that infections agents can be transmitted
to animals through feed contamination, as example, that non-Typhi serotype of S.
enterica could be transmitted to chicken through feed contamination by
feces of infected rodents. Poultry feed which is exposed to feces of animals
became a reason of human infection through chicken consumption (Jones, 2011).
Poultry feed may contain numerous micro-flora that are obtained from more than
one environmental sources such as dust, soil and insects. Material of poultry
feed may be inoculated with pathogens during growing, harvesting, processing
and storage of feed.
Poultry
feeds infection with a pathogenic microorganism occur during processing, by
handling, mixing of ingredients and exposing the raw materials and finished
products. Therefore, poultry diseases and death occur as a result of consumption
of contaminated feed (Ashida et al.,
2011).
The
world consumption of poultry products, namely meat and eggs, is remarkably
increasing with increase in number of people, and this is because of good
quality and effective price. The wide spread of human consumption of poultry
meat and eggs necessitates the control of microbial contamination.
The
safety of poultry products raises the importance of efforts that should be
exerted towards evaluation and detection of microbial hazard, which represents
a great risk to the consumer. Poultry feed is considered as one of the
important sources of contamination of poultry products (Brown et al.,
2001). The safety and quality of poultry feeds are currently of major concern
in developed counties, that safety of feed is a fundamental requirement for all
birds. Unsafe feed may lead to great economic losses in case of destroying an
infected flock of birds.
The
world feed manufacture and stock industries have faced severe food safety
issues throughout the last two decades such as the outbreak of bovine
encephalopathy (BSE) and Belgium dioxin crisis, which occurred in 1999 due to
contaminated fat supplied to stock feed manufacture (Brown et al.,
2001). These incidents showed the importance of feed safety in ensuring the
safety of human food. One of the major areas of concern in the bacterial
contamination of poultry feed come from the stock feed, raw materials and farms
(Sakazaki, 2000).
There
has been an increased focus on food as source of bacterial contamination of
livestock production units, and there are standard measures that every feed
factory or industry should follow and produce high quality, efficiency and
pathogen-free feed. Industry must accept greater share of responsibility for
the quality and safety of poultry feed production (Borland, 2000). approaches
had been made to reduce the contamination of poultry materials as well as the
finished product, with some invasive Salmonella, the most important
cause of infection in poultry (Borland, 2000). Non-typhi serotype of Salmonella
enterica was reported in US poultry feed as early as 1948. Studies from
around the world have documented the presence of S. enterica in a
wide variety of animal feeds (Kidd et al., 2002).
Several
other microorganisms such as Bacillus spp., Staphylococcus spp.
E. coli, Campylobacter and Clostridium perfringens can contaminate
poultry feeds either from feed ingredients, through farms’ workers,
equipment, air, handling, used bags or raw materials. There is a
considerable evidence that poultry feed is frequently contaminated with
food-borne bacterial pathogens Risk assessment data for most poultry-borne
hazards are lacking, however, these types of data are essential in developing
food safety strategies. There is a need to evaluate poultry production,
processing, handling, and preparation procedures to determine their impact on
the risk of food-borne illness. Fully understanding the hazards associated with
poultry consumption is the key to develop effective sampling, detection, and
identification methods, that in turn can be utilized to design control
strategies (Parkhill, 2001).
1.1 AIMS OF STUDY
The
aim of the present study was to isolate and identify the microorganisms
associated with the contamination of different poultry feeds.
1.2 OBJECTIVES OF STUDY
·
To isolate and
characterize the bacteria present in the different feed samples.
·
To determine the
percentage occurrence of the isolates
·
To determine the
antibiotics sensitivity testing of the isolates from the various feed samples.
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