4.6 Article

Effect of post-harvest processing methods on the microbial safety of edible seaweed

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYCOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 1331-1346

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10811-023-02937-w

Keywords

Edible Macroalgae; Food Safety; Bacterial Pathogens; Aquaculture; Processing

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The American seaweed industry is rapidly growing in the edible sector, and it is necessary to evaluate the safety of current post-harvest storage and processing methods. We conducted a study to evaluate the pathogen load of edible kelp under different storage temperatures and drying methods. The results showed that storage at 4°C and 10°C halted the replication of focal pathogens, and both air-drying and freeze-drying significantly reduced surface pathogen load. These findings are promising for the industry as they support the safety of current post-harvest storage and processing conditions.
The American seaweed industry is growing, primarily into the edible sector, and more seaweed products are available for human consumption. It is necessary to evaluate the safety of industry's current post-harvest storage and processing methods to ensure the risk of foodborne pathogens on edible seaweed remains low. We evaluated the pathogen load of edible kelp post-harvest under three different storage temperatures (4C, 10C, 20C) and two different drying methods (air- and freeze-drying). The focal pathogens for this research included: Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella enterica, Staphylococcus aureus, pathogenic Escherichia coli, Vibrio vulnificus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus. We tested all six pathogens under each treatment condition on both sugar kelp (Saccharina latissima) and rockweed (Ascophyllum nodosum) as these are the most commonly farmed and wild-harvested species in Maine, respectively. We inoculated a known concentration of pathogen onto freshly harvested kelp, treated it under a storage temperature or drying method, and sampled it over time to determine the impact of treatment on pathogen load. Our results showed that storage at 20C can lead to replication while storage at 4C and 10C halted the replication of focal pathogens. Both air-drying and freeze-drying produced significant log scale reductions in surface pathogen load for all focal pathogens. Additionally, air-drying reduced pathogen load more than freeze-drying for a majority of pathogens and storing dried kelp for 6-weeks further reduced pathogen load across all cases. These results are promising for industry as they corroborate historical evidence that current post-harvest storage and processing conditions are producing products safe for human consumption.

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