A factorial laboratory experiment was conducted to assess the effects of heating times of 0, 20, 40, and 80 sec at 160 F and propionic acid concentrations of 0, 0.1%, and 0.2% on reduction of Salmonella enteritidis in poultry feed with approximately 15% moisture. The results showed that after 80 sec heating time an approximately 10,000-fold reduction in living salmonella was obtained in the samples with 0.2% propionic acid. Survival in the 0.2% acid group was 2 log10 lower than in the 0.1% and control groups. This difference was statistically significant. Multivariate analysis with repeated measures showed there was no interaction between heating time and propionic acid concentration (P = 0.4113). There were overall significant effects for both acid concentration (P < 0.00001) and heating time (P < 0.0001).
In Niger, the epidemiological situation regarding foot-and-mouth disease is unclear since many outbreaks are unreported. This study aimed i) to identify FMDV strains currently circulating in cattle herds, and ii) to identify risk factors associated with FMD seropositive animals in clinical outbreaks. Epithelial tissues (n=25) and sera (n=227)
The complete genome sequences of three foot-and-mouth disease viruses (one virus of each serotype SAT1, SAT2 and O) were directly sequenced from RNA extracted from clinical bovine samples, demonstrating the feasibility of full-genome sequencing from strong positive samples taken from symptomatic animals.
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