This work explored the effects of salinity and temperature on the efficacy of purging from eastern oysters (). Oysters were inoculated with a 5-strain cocktail of to levels of 10 to 10 MPN (most probable number)/g and depurated in a controlled re-circulating wet-storage system with artificial seawater (ASW). Both salinity and temperature remarkably affected the efficacy for the depuration of from oysters during wet-storage. The wet-storage process at salinity 20 ppt at 7.5 °C or 10 °C could achieve a larger than 3 log (MPN/g) reduction of at Day 7, which meets the FDA's requirement as a post-harvest process for control. At the conditions of 10 °C and 20 ppt, a pre-chilled system could achieve a 3.54 log (MPN/g) reduction of in oysters on Day 7. There was no significant difference in the shelf life between inoculated and untreated oysters before the depuration, with a same survival rate (stored in a 4 °C cooler for 15 days) of 93%.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9145652 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11050553 | DOI Listing |
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