Bacteroidales on Harvesters: Baseline Prevalence and Abundance

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Abstract

Fresh produce encounters pathogens at various stages of production and supply, with the harvesting process serving as one of these stages. To evaluate contamination associated with harvesting, we systematically swabbed zone 1 harvester surfaces and quantified Bacteroidales as a fecal biomarker using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Baseline contamination was dominated by non-detects, with occasional low-level detections (<25 copies/cm 2 ) near the assay limit of detection (LoD). Detection occurred more frequently post-harvest (overall ∼4% pre-harvest and 10% post-harvest), while microbial loads remained low, indicating that harvesting primarily affected the likelihood of low-level contamination rather than increasing contamination abundance. Additionally, we developed and field-deployed a portable loop- mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay for rapid harvester hygiene assessment and benchmarked its field performance against qPCR. Together, these results support a practical molecular tool for monitoring fecal contamination and informing cleaning and sanitization decisions.

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