Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Depner, Ronise Faria Rohde
Data de Publicação: 2020
Outros Autores: Lucca, Vivian, Depner, Rômulo Alexandre, Pontin, Karine Patrin, Potter, Luciana, Borges, Karen Apellanis, Furian, Thales Quedi, Nascimento, Vladimir Pinheiro do, Lovato, Maristela
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/216884
Resumo: Background: The dissemination of pathogenic microorganisms in hatcheries leads to a higher number of contaminated eggs, causing reduction in hatchability and increase of discarded chicks. Sanitation programs are crucial for maximum hatchability and chick quality. Efforts have been made to find alternative approaches to the conventional disinfectants, and surfaces with copper, which have antimicrobial properties, could assist in this process. However, the possible adverse effects of copper surfaces on chicks in hatcheries have not yet been evaluated. The present study aimed at developing hatch baskets composed of copper and evaluating the effect of these baskets on the productive indexes of a hatchery. Materials, Methods & Results: For this experiment, 3.15 kg hatch tray prototypes with 99.9% Cu (Cu11000) were developed to fit inside conventional polypropylene hatch baskets (580 × 755 × 83 mm). Six polypropylene hatch baskets (control group) and six polypropylene hatch baskets covered by 99.9% copper (Cu11000) hatch trays (test group) were evaluated during 5 hatchings. Hatched eggs and chicks remained in contact with the hatch basket surfaces for at least 72 h, corresponding to the entire period in which they were located in the hatcher. Cleaning and disinfection programs of the hatchery were not modified. The level of microbial contamination on the hatch baskets was evaluated at 6 different periods: 0 h (initial contamination after disinfection and egg transfer to the trays); 24 h, 30 h, 45 h and 60 h after the first sampling; and at the moment when chicks were removed from the hatching cabinet and transferred to the chick-holding room (> 60 h). Counting of total moulds and yeasts, mesophilic microorganisms, Enterobacteria and Escherichia coli colonies was performed. The number of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded were registered for each hatching. Microbiologic analyses showed no growth on hatch baskets neither of the test group nor on those of the control group, regardless of the period evaluated. No significant difference was found between the two groups in the counts of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded. Discussion: The antimicrobial efficacy of copper surfaces has been established for a variety of bacteria and fungi, including in the healthcare environment. In addition, antimicrobial resistance to copper is extremely rare because of copper’s multisite kill mechanism and other mostly nonspecific damage mechanisms. Several copper applications have been established; however, the potential adverse effects of using copper surfaces in hatcheries on chicks or on hatchery productive indexes had not yet been evaluated. The analyses performed in this study did not show microbiological growth. The results showed that the copper surface did not cause any significant adverse effects on chicks. The hatched chicks were visually healthy, and no significant difference was found between the numbers of chicks discarded in the control and test groups. Since the production parameters were not altered or impaired in the present study, it is possible to conclude that the use of copper surfaces in hatcheries can be an effective tool in the microbiological control of these environments. Nevertheless, copper alloys lend themselves to the creation of self-sanitizing surfaces that should be used as a complement and not as a substitute for standard cleaning and disinfection practices.
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spelling Depner, Ronise Faria RohdeLucca, VivianDepner, Rômulo AlexandrePontin, Karine PatrinPotter, LucianaBorges, Karen ApellanisFurian, Thales QuediNascimento, Vladimir Pinheiro doLovato, Maristela2020-12-24T04:21:34Z20201678-0345http://hdl.handle.net/10183/216884001120441Background: The dissemination of pathogenic microorganisms in hatcheries leads to a higher number of contaminated eggs, causing reduction in hatchability and increase of discarded chicks. Sanitation programs are crucial for maximum hatchability and chick quality. Efforts have been made to find alternative approaches to the conventional disinfectants, and surfaces with copper, which have antimicrobial properties, could assist in this process. However, the possible adverse effects of copper surfaces on chicks in hatcheries have not yet been evaluated. The present study aimed at developing hatch baskets composed of copper and evaluating the effect of these baskets on the productive indexes of a hatchery. Materials, Methods & Results: For this experiment, 3.15 kg hatch tray prototypes with 99.9% Cu (Cu11000) were developed to fit inside conventional polypropylene hatch baskets (580 × 755 × 83 mm). Six polypropylene hatch baskets (control group) and six polypropylene hatch baskets covered by 99.9% copper (Cu11000) hatch trays (test group) were evaluated during 5 hatchings. Hatched eggs and chicks remained in contact with the hatch basket surfaces for at least 72 h, corresponding to the entire period in which they were located in the hatcher. Cleaning and disinfection programs of the hatchery were not modified. The level of microbial contamination on the hatch baskets was evaluated at 6 different periods: 0 h (initial contamination after disinfection and egg transfer to the trays); 24 h, 30 h, 45 h and 60 h after the first sampling; and at the moment when chicks were removed from the hatching cabinet and transferred to the chick-holding room (> 60 h). Counting of total moulds and yeasts, mesophilic microorganisms, Enterobacteria and Escherichia coli colonies was performed. The number of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded were registered for each hatching. Microbiologic analyses showed no growth on hatch baskets neither of the test group nor on those of the control group, regardless of the period evaluated. No significant difference was found between the two groups in the counts of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded. Discussion: The antimicrobial efficacy of copper surfaces has been established for a variety of bacteria and fungi, including in the healthcare environment. In addition, antimicrobial resistance to copper is extremely rare because of copper’s multisite kill mechanism and other mostly nonspecific damage mechanisms. Several copper applications have been established; however, the potential adverse effects of using copper surfaces in hatcheries on chicks or on hatchery productive indexes had not yet been evaluated. The analyses performed in this study did not show microbiological growth. The results showed that the copper surface did not cause any significant adverse effects on chicks. The hatched chicks were visually healthy, and no significant difference was found between the numbers of chicks discarded in the control and test groups. Since the production parameters were not altered or impaired in the present study, it is possible to conclude that the use of copper surfaces in hatcheries can be an effective tool in the microbiological control of these environments. Nevertheless, copper alloys lend themselves to the creation of self-sanitizing surfaces that should be used as a complement and not as a substitute for standard cleaning and disinfection practices.application/pdfengActa scientiae veterinariae. Porto Alegre, RS. Vol. 48 (2020), Pub. 1770, 6 p.CobreIncubação do ovoEfeitos adversosProdução avícolaControle microbiologicoCopperHatcheryMicrobiological controlSafetyPoultryDevelopment of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatcheryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/otherinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001120441.pdf.txt001120441.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain23930http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/216884/2/001120441.pdf.txt5dd113842ed715ec39024dbf3c70d7deMD52ORIGINAL001120441.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf369476http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/216884/1/001120441.pdfa42a5d78d8e0ca6607c81c5c9e1470b3MD5110183/2168842020-12-25 05:12:14.311601oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/216884Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2020-12-25T07:12:14Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
title Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
spellingShingle Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
Depner, Ronise Faria Rohde
Cobre
Incubação do ovo
Efeitos adversos
Produção avícola
Controle microbiologico
Copper
Hatchery
Microbiological control
Safety
Poultry
title_short Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
title_full Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
title_fullStr Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
title_full_unstemmed Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
title_sort Development of copper hatch baskets and evaluation of the productive indexes of a commercial hatchery
author Depner, Ronise Faria Rohde
author_facet Depner, Ronise Faria Rohde
Lucca, Vivian
Depner, Rômulo Alexandre
Pontin, Karine Patrin
Potter, Luciana
Borges, Karen Apellanis
Furian, Thales Quedi
Nascimento, Vladimir Pinheiro do
Lovato, Maristela
author_role author
author2 Lucca, Vivian
Depner, Rômulo Alexandre
Pontin, Karine Patrin
Potter, Luciana
Borges, Karen Apellanis
Furian, Thales Quedi
Nascimento, Vladimir Pinheiro do
Lovato, Maristela
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Depner, Ronise Faria Rohde
Lucca, Vivian
Depner, Rômulo Alexandre
Pontin, Karine Patrin
Potter, Luciana
Borges, Karen Apellanis
Furian, Thales Quedi
Nascimento, Vladimir Pinheiro do
Lovato, Maristela
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Cobre
Incubação do ovo
Efeitos adversos
Produção avícola
Controle microbiologico
topic Cobre
Incubação do ovo
Efeitos adversos
Produção avícola
Controle microbiologico
Copper
Hatchery
Microbiological control
Safety
Poultry
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Copper
Hatchery
Microbiological control
Safety
Poultry
description Background: The dissemination of pathogenic microorganisms in hatcheries leads to a higher number of contaminated eggs, causing reduction in hatchability and increase of discarded chicks. Sanitation programs are crucial for maximum hatchability and chick quality. Efforts have been made to find alternative approaches to the conventional disinfectants, and surfaces with copper, which have antimicrobial properties, could assist in this process. However, the possible adverse effects of copper surfaces on chicks in hatcheries have not yet been evaluated. The present study aimed at developing hatch baskets composed of copper and evaluating the effect of these baskets on the productive indexes of a hatchery. Materials, Methods & Results: For this experiment, 3.15 kg hatch tray prototypes with 99.9% Cu (Cu11000) were developed to fit inside conventional polypropylene hatch baskets (580 × 755 × 83 mm). Six polypropylene hatch baskets (control group) and six polypropylene hatch baskets covered by 99.9% copper (Cu11000) hatch trays (test group) were evaluated during 5 hatchings. Hatched eggs and chicks remained in contact with the hatch basket surfaces for at least 72 h, corresponding to the entire period in which they were located in the hatcher. Cleaning and disinfection programs of the hatchery were not modified. The level of microbial contamination on the hatch baskets was evaluated at 6 different periods: 0 h (initial contamination after disinfection and egg transfer to the trays); 24 h, 30 h, 45 h and 60 h after the first sampling; and at the moment when chicks were removed from the hatching cabinet and transferred to the chick-holding room (> 60 h). Counting of total moulds and yeasts, mesophilic microorganisms, Enterobacteria and Escherichia coli colonies was performed. The number of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded were registered for each hatching. Microbiologic analyses showed no growth on hatch baskets neither of the test group nor on those of the control group, regardless of the period evaluated. No significant difference was found between the two groups in the counts of hatched chicks, non-hatched eggs, and chicks discarded. Discussion: The antimicrobial efficacy of copper surfaces has been established for a variety of bacteria and fungi, including in the healthcare environment. In addition, antimicrobial resistance to copper is extremely rare because of copper’s multisite kill mechanism and other mostly nonspecific damage mechanisms. Several copper applications have been established; however, the potential adverse effects of using copper surfaces in hatcheries on chicks or on hatchery productive indexes had not yet been evaluated. The analyses performed in this study did not show microbiological growth. The results showed that the copper surface did not cause any significant adverse effects on chicks. The hatched chicks were visually healthy, and no significant difference was found between the numbers of chicks discarded in the control and test groups. Since the production parameters were not altered or impaired in the present study, it is possible to conclude that the use of copper surfaces in hatcheries can be an effective tool in the microbiological control of these environments. Nevertheless, copper alloys lend themselves to the creation of self-sanitizing surfaces that should be used as a complement and not as a substitute for standard cleaning and disinfection practices.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2020-12-24T04:21:34Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2020
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dc.identifier.issn.pt_BR.fl_str_mv 1678-0345
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Acta scientiae veterinariae. Porto Alegre, RS. Vol. 48 (2020), Pub. 1770, 6 p.
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