Food science professor Scott Martin is looking for ways to eliminate biofilms that contain pathogens and attach themselves to produce. Once the biofilm is on the produce, Martin said no amount of washing will remove it. Also, low levels (10-100 cells) of this E. coli strain can cause infection. Martin said growers need to be particularly careful about the water they use to irrigate plants, since it can be contaminated with pathogens.
Martin’s colleague Hao Feng is developing a process that kills pathogenic organisms in liquid products using ultrasound and low temperatures. A previous outbreak of E. coli occurred in cider and apple juice. Growers are now required to pasteurize these types of liquid products.
{sidebar id=1}
For more:
Latest from Greenhouse Management
- The Growth Industry Episode 10: State of the Horticulture Industry
- Millennium Pacific Greenhouses launches California Grown Cucumber Program
- Scientists develop vitamin A-enriched tomato to fight global deficiency
- Tennessee Green Industry Field Day scheduled for June 11
- UTIA and UT Knoxville research teams will develop automated compost monitoring system
- Ken and Deena Altman receive American Floral Endowment Ambassador Award
- [SNEAK PEEK] Leading Women of Horticulture: The women of Fairview Greenhouses & Garden Center
- [SNEAK PEEK] Leading Women of Horticulture: The inventive women of TPIE ’26