AUTHOR=Feye Kristina M. , Micchichi Andrew C. , Rubinelli Peter M. , Knueven Carl J. , Thompson Dale R. , Kogut Michael H. , Ricke Steven C. TITLE=The Effect of Acid Sanitizers on the Microbiome of Re-use Water JOURNAL=Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems VOLUME=4 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sustainable-food-systems/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00085 DOI=10.3389/fsufs.2020.00085 ISSN=2571-581X ABSTRACT=
Due to global climate change, water is becoming increasingly scarce. The poultry industry is a major consumer of fresh water; therefore, in order to reduce their environmental footprint, companies are in the beginning stages of evaluating water for re-use. Re-use water is classified as water from the poultry plant that has been collected, sanitized, and used again during poultry processing. Necessarily, this water must be potable as it otherwise produces a significant risk to the poultry industry. One of the most commonly used sanitizers in processing water is peracetic acid (PAA). At high concentrations, PAA is corrosive to the metal equipment in the plant and introduces a significant occupational hazard to plant workers. Inorganic sanitizers, such as sodium bisulfate (SBS), have documented antimicrobial and sanitation effects on a variety of surfaces. In this study, SBS and PAA were compared for their ability to sanitize re-use water collected from a local poultry plant. Fresh, commercial poultry processing plant re-use water was collected at the end of a processing shift and used within 1 h of the collection. Microcosms were created to simulate the sanitation environment and a time course collection of live microorganisms were collected and evaluated for aerobic plate counts, total