Microbial quality of edible seeds commercially available in southern Portugal.

AIMS Microbiol

Universidade do Algarve, Instituto Superior de Engenharia, Campus da Penha,8005-139, Faro Portugal.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the microbiological quality of various seeds (sesame, flaxseed, chia, pumpkin, and sunflower) and flaxseed flour sold in southern Portugal, focusing on aerobic microorganisms, molds, and yeast counts.
  • The highest levels of aerobic microorganisms were found in flaxseed and flaxseed flour, while chia seeds had the lowest counts for both aerobic microorganisms and filamentous fungi.
  • Despite some samples exceeding acceptable microbial levels, they met EU microbiological standards, and the study highlights the necessity for better processing, storage, and decontamination methods to ensure seed safety.

Article Abstract

In the present work, the microbiological quality of sesame, flaxseed, chia, pumpkin sunflower seeds, a mix of seeds, as well as flaxseed flour, marketed in southern Portugal, were studied through the counting of aerobic microorganisms at 30 °C (AM), molds and yeast (M&Y), (β-glucuronidase positive) (β-GP ), coagulase positive, and detection of spp. The persistence of AM and M&Y populations were also counted in organic and non-organic flaxseed at 20 °C for 11 months. The seeds with the highest average of AM were flaxseed (1.3 x 10 CFU/g) followed by flaxseed flour (1.1 x 10 CFU/g) while the lowest level was found in chia (2.9 x 10 CFU/g). This seed also presented the lowest average values of filamentous fungi (9.8 x 10 CFU/g), whereas sunflower seeds had the highest levels (1.7 x 10 CFU/g). Flaxseed flour had the highest yeast counts (1.5 x 10 CFU/g). Although some samples had high levels of AM and fungi, β-GP and were not detected, therefore, they complied with the microbiological criteria of the European Union. The organic flaxseed contained higher numbers of AM and M&Y than the non-organic ones (p < 0.05). In addition, the storage of flaxseed at 20 °C resulted in changes of AM and M&Y, showing that these populations were able to remain viable after eleven months (AM Log 5.4-Log 5.6; M&Y Log 2.8-Log 4.1). The results obtained in the present study, namely those high levels of AM and fungi (>10 and 10 CFU/g respectively), alert to the need of improving processing practices, storage/distribution conditions of edible seeds and derivatives, as well as the requirement of implementing adequate decontamination techniques.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8995187PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/microbiol.2022004DOI Listing

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