The occurrence of bacteria from the genus Listeria in raw sheep milk and traditional local cheese was studied in three regions of the Karak district of Jordan. Conventional plating methods for the detection of Listeria species were followed to determine the average and the percentage of the contaminated samples. The result shows that there were significant differences between the regions in the study concerning the average and the percentage of positive occurrences of Listeria species in raw sheep milk. The results also showed that mainly L. monocytogenes and, to a lesser degree, L. ivanovii and L. innocua were found in the milk samples, while the occurrence of L. monocytogenes in cheese samples was very low.
To study the effects of dietary iron source (basal diet-FeSO4 x 7H2O, liver, lentil, spinach, liver + lentil, liver+spinach and lentil+spinach) on iron bioavailability, fifty-six Albino Sprague Dawley derived male 21 days old rats were fed on iron-deficient diet (7.8 mg Fe kg(-1) diet) and the mentioned seven iron containing diets (40 mg Fe kg(-1) diet) for 10 days. Rats fed liver diet showed higher iron apparent absorption (52.1%), hemoglobin (Hb) gain (0.94 g/100 mL), Hb-iron gain (1.2 mg), Hb-regeneration efficiency (HRE%) (50.8%), relative efficiency of HRE% (106.5%), packed cell volume gain (2.22%) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (0.64 g dL(-1)). Liver resulted in an increase in these parameters when mixed with lentil and spinach diets. However, rats fed iron free diet showed the higher dry matter absorption.
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