Persistence of Escherichia coli on injured vegetable plants.

2010 
Abstract Minor shoot injury to glasshouse celery, Cos lettuce and chive plants significantly increased the persistence of applied Escherichia coli ( P . After 1 week, mean counts of about 5 log 10 CFU/g decreased to fewer than 0.5 log 10 CFU/g on the uninjured plants, compared to 4 log 10 CFU/g or more on injured plants. By the end of the 3-week long experiments, counts from the uninjured plants were 0.21 log 10 CFU/g or fewer, but 2.8, 2.3 and 5.1 log 10 CFU/g on injured Cos lettuce, celery and chive plants, respectively. A field experiment using Cos lettuce also showed that shoot injury increased E. coli persistence. Counts from the injured plants on days 1, 3, and 7 were, 4.2, 4.1 and 3.3 log 10 CFU/g, respectively, whereas the uninjured plants returned significantly ( P 10 CFU/g, respectively. These findings reveal that increased E. coli persistence on injured tissue is common to different vegetables and can occur in the glasshouse and the field. The implications of this study on vegetable production practices are presented.
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