“…Highest reductions of aerobic bacteria and Enterobacteriaceae were thereby obtained by pre-evisceration spraying (Bosilevac, Nou, Barkocy-Gallagher, Arthur, & Koohmaraie, 2006), whereas in the other studies washing was applied at the end of slaughter. In comparison with hot water spraying, cold and warm water yielded reductions of aerobic bacteria, coliforms and E. coli by 0.3-2.9, 0.4-3.0 and 0.3-3.5 orders of magnitude, respectively (Cabedo et al, 1996;Cutter, 1999;Cutter, Dorsa, & Siragusa, 1997;Cutter & Rivera-Betancourt, 2000;Cutter & Siragusa, 1995;Cutter et al, 2000;Dorsa et al, 1996b;Gill & Landers, 2003;Gorman, Morgan, Sofos, & Smith, 1995a;Gorman et al, 1995b;Marshall, Niebuhr, Acuff, Lucia, & Dickson, 2005;Reagan et al, 1996). Under commercial conditions, cold and warm water spraying using wash cabinets reduced aerobic bacteria, coliforms and E. coli on beef carcasses by 0.5-1.0 orders of magnitude (Gill & Landers, 2003;Reagan et al, 1996).…”