Incidence and Recovery of Salmonellae and Other Bacteria from Commercially Processed Poultry Carcasses at Selected Pre- and Post-Evisceration Steps

Abstract
This study was undertaken to determine whether bacteria are already attached to poultry skin when birds arrive at the processing plant. Multiple rinses were performed on breast skin and whole carcasses taken from five processing points in a commercial plant: Before scalding, after scalding, after picking, after the final washer, and from the exit end of the chiller. Aerobic bacteria and Enterobacteriaceae were recovered from carcasses in up to 40 consecutive whole carcass rinses with a difference of only about one log for Enterobacteriaceae, and 1 to 2 logs for aerobes from the first to the last rinse of carcasses taken from the beginning and the end of the processing line. Data from rinses prior to scalding indicated that bacteria were firmly attached to poultry carcasses when they first arrived in the plant. Not all bacteria were removed during processing; however, there were fewer aerobes and Enterobacteriaceae at progressive sampling points. Attached salmonellae were not always recovered in the first whole carcass rinse, but were sometimes recovered in 3rd, 5th, and 10th rinses. These data show that a single whole carcass rinse can result in false negative test results for salmonellae. Because of the small number of positive samples in this study, the probability of recovering salmonellae with a single whole carcass rinse could not be estimated accurately.