Welcome to Modern Agriculture!
home

What more can live production do to reduce Salmonella in poultry?

Successful Salmonella control throughout live poultry production requires an integrated effort, attention to detail and careful follow-through to help processing plants meet more stringent USDA standards, said poultry health experts at a recent food-safety news conference.

“Everyone in live production has to be on board because a slip-up in one area can wreck all the time and effort put into the rest of the plan,” said Don Waldrip, DVM, senior technical services veterinarian, Zoetis.

Charles Hofacre, DVM, PhD, president of the Southern Poultry Research Group Inc., Athens, Georgia, advised starting with clean broiler breeders because hens can vertically pass Salmonella on to their broiler progeny.

“Make sure you know your pullet source and make sure there isn’t a mouse or darkling beetle infestation. I’ve worked with pullet farms where we’ve had to completely tear out sidewalls and insulation to get rid of beetles to get control of Salmonella,” he said.

Lower the load

Vaccination of breeders, broilers or both can help lower the load of Salmonella going into the processing plant and is especially worth considering for companies with plants in Category 3, both veterinarians said. However, they cautioned that Salmonella in flocks might be more than vaccines can handle if not supplemented with other control measures.

Vaccination can be supplemented, Hofacre said, with the use of products like essential oils, probiotics and organic acids.

“They don’t have a direct effect on Salmonella like a vaccine would have, but I think they stimulate intestinal immunity or make the gut a place that’s less favorable for Salmonella colonisation,” he explained.

“It usually requires the use of more than one of these to have any success. An essential oil, for example, might not be very helpful when used alone, but if it’s coupled with the right probiotic or botanical, it may help.”

Waldrip reviewed other steps poultry producers can take as part of an integrated food safety plan targeting Salmonella:

Besides a standard operating procedure for Salmonella control, there has to be a way to ensure compliance. “If you’ve got bait boxes out for rodents, someone has to make sure they’ve got bait,” he said. “That’s the kind of little detail that’s essential for a Salmonella control plan to work.”

Waldrip concluded that “If tackling the Salmonella problem sounds like a Herculean and expensive task, it is. But today’s producers can’t afford to skimp on Salmonella control. If FSIS shuts down your plant, it’ll cost a lot more.”


Modern Agriculture
Animal husbandry