Ammonia Disinfection of Hatchery Waste for Elimination of Single-Stranded RNA Viruses

Author:

Emmoth Eva12,Ottoson Jakob23,Albihn Ann3,Belák Sándor12,Vinnerås Björn34

Affiliation:

1. Department of Virology, Immunobiology and Parasitology, National Veterinary Institute (SVA), Uppsala, Sweden

2. Department of Biomedical Sciences and Veterinary Public Health, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden

3. Department of Chemistry, Environment and Feed Hygiene, National Veterinary Institute (SVA), Uppsala, Sweden

4. Department of Energy and Technology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden

Abstract

ABSTRACT Hatchery waste, an animal by-product of the poultry industry, needs sanitation treatment before further use as fertilizer or as a substrate in biogas or composting plants, owing to the potential presence of opportunistic pathogens, including zoonotic viruses. Effective sanitation is also important in viral epizootic outbreaks and as a routine, ensuring high hygiene standards on farms. This study examined the use of ammonia at different concentrations and temperatures to disinfect hatchery waste. Inactivation kinetics of high-pathogenic avian influenza virus H7N1 and low-pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N3, as representatives of notifiable avian viral diseases, were determined in spiked hatchery waste. Bovine parainfluenza virus type 3, feline coronavirus, and feline calicivirus were used as models for other important avian pathogens, such as Newcastle disease virus, infectious bronchitis virus, and avian hepatitis E virus. Bacteriophage MS2 was also monitored as a stable indicator. Coronavirus was the most sensitive virus, with decimal reduction ( D ) values of 1.2 and 0.63 h after addition of 0.5% (wt/wt) ammonia at 14 and 25°C, respectively. Under similar conditions, high-pathogenic avian influenza H7N1 was the most resistant, with D values of 3.0 and 1.4 h. MS2 was more resistant than the viruses to all treatments and proved to be a suitable indicator of viral inactivation. The results indicate that ammonia treatment of hatchery waste is efficient in inactivating enveloped and naked single-stranded RNA viruses. Based on the D values and confidence intervals obtained, guidelines for treatment were proposed, and one was successfully validated at full scale at a hatchery, with MS2 added to hatchery waste.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference52 articles.

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2. Anonymous. 2009. Epizootihandboken. Swedish Board of Agriculture Jönköping Sweden.

3. Anonymous. 1995. ISO 10705-1, water quality-detection and enumeration of bacteriophages. Part 1: enumeration of F-specific RNA bacteriophages. International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland.

4. Comparative pathogenesis in specific-pathogen-free chickens of two strains of avian hepatitis E virus recovered from a chicken with hepatitis-splenomegaly syndrome and from a clinically healthy chicken;Billam P.;Vet. Microbiol,2009

5. The correlation of fatty acid content of infected cells and virions with Newcastle disease virus (NDV) virulence;Blenkharn J. I.;J. Gen. Virol,1981

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