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2003: Beef Checkoff helps fund E.coli research
by Charlene Schuster, Executive
Director, Montana Beef Council
| "Given
the impact this pathogen has had on the entire industry,
the outcome of this research could have important
national implications." |
A research team at Montana State University in Bozeman
wants to break the chain of E. coli O157:H7 contamination
before animals get to the slaughterhouse. Extension
Beef Specialist John Paterson will lead a research team
in a checkoff-funded study to measure the effectiveness
of an E. coli O157 vaccine during the 45 days after
weaning.
Packers and government officials, among others, increasingly
call for feedlots to take steps to reduce E. coli O157:H7.
One study has shown that as many as 87 percent of calves
have been exposed toE. coli O157:H7 prior to weaning.
Other studies have shown the pathogen is endemic at
the feedlot level.
While multiple hurdle systems at packing plants ensure
an extremely remote chance of E. coli O157:H7 contamination
of the carcasses and subsequent meat products, additional
interventions at feed lots and ranches could further
reduce the number of cattle shedding E. coli O157:H7
and provide a multi-stage process to eliminate this
food safety risk. Intervening at the backgrounding stage
seems a good time to try and reduce E. coli incidence
before the cattle are shipped to feedlots, Paterson
says.
Montana beef producers serving on the Montana Beef
Council have identified beef safety as a top priority.
It's an area where their beef checkoff dollars spent.
Given the impact this pathogen has had on the entire
industry, the outcome of this research could have important
national implications. Checkoff funding for this project
comes from the 50 cents that is sent to the Cattlemen's
Beef Board authorized by producers to fund research,
education and promotion.
"If we can reduce the prevalence of E. coli O157:H7
in feeder cattle," Paterson says, "and if
we can appropriately manage them between weaning and
the packing plant, then we could lower the prevalence
of E. coli O157:H7 on harvest cattle, thereby reducing
contamination on carcasses."
The research project calls for the use of the vaccine
on calves starting during a 45-day preconditioning period.
This study, funded through the $1-per-head beef checkoff
and MSU, will split 800 newly weaned calves into six
pens. Half of the calves in each pen will receive the
E. colivaccine at day 0 and day 21 of the 45-day preconditioning
period and the rest of the calves will not receive any
treatments.
E. coli O157:H7 sampling will be done on the first
day of the 45-day preconditioning period and day 45
of the preconditioning period. There is evidence to
show when 15 to 20 percent of cattle in a pen are contaminated
with E. coli O157:H7, multiple hurdle interventions
at the packing plant can prevent carcass contamination.
If, however, 40 percent or more of the cattle were contaminated,
it was unlikely multiple interventions could eliminate
all the E. coli O157:H7.
Beef:
Questions & Answers is a joint project between
MSU Extension and the Montana Beef Council. This column
informs producers about current consumer education,
promotion and research projects funded through the
$1 per head checkoff. For more information, contact
the Montana Beef Council at (406) 442-5111 or at beefcncl@mt.net
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