Food
Pests
The food pests are the creatures who
are destructive, noxious or troublesome and lives on or in the prepared foods
or raw materials intended for production of foods or feed for human or animal
consumption, which is capable of directly or indirectly contaminate the foods
or raw materials. Thus, pest control is an essential part of food safety to
prevent the spread of disease, formation of toxic compounds and loss of
material including following:
Prevention of contamination through
rodents or birds which may result in food poisoning. Rodents are scavengers who
use to feed on refuse, waste and or contaminated foods, whereas rats often
lives in sewers as well as they are in close association of other animals.
Thus, often carry food poisoning bacteria, such as salmonellae, E. coli, etc.
both inside and outside their bodies as well as on their feet or mouths. Once
they enter to a food processing or holding premise, they can easily transfer
the food poisoning organisms to foods or food contact surfaces from their fur,
mouths, feet, urine and feces. Thus, rat urine contamination can sometimes lead
to Weil’s disease.
Pest control is mandatory, since
prevention of wastage due to food contamination as well as losses through the
damage of packaging by the pests, which are associated with additional costs
due to loss of production, recall of contaminated foods or criminal or civil
action as a result of sale of contaminated food stuffs.
It is also important to control pest
attacks, because pest damage can cause gnawing electrical fires, burst of plumbing
or subsidence, or cause of borrowing may result due to rodent infestations.
Nonetheless, it is important to
comply with legislation to avoid possible fines or closure of business as well
as to avoid loss of customers who object to pest infested premises as well as
sale of contaminated food stuffs. Further, employees will demotivated and
abandon the employments due to fear, disease outbreaks or intolerability.
Common
Food Pests
There are various kind of food pests
found the industry, however following are the most common in nature.
Rodents
– rats and mice
Rodents comprise a group of furred,
warm blooded animals which include rats and mice. The two most common rodent
encounters are rats and house mice.Rats and mice are attracted by food supplies
but do not venture far from their shelter or nesting sites, and will nest close
to food sources. They are capable of a rapid increase in population given an
abundant food supply, shelter from predators and benign environmental
conditions inside a building.
Rats
There are two types of rats and most
common are depend on the region, but brown rat (Norway rat/ground rat) and
black rats (roof rat) are usually common in different parts of the world, the
brown and black rats are the most predominant varieties who usually borrows in
the soil, especially beneath the buildings, or usually found in sewers,
drainage lines, farms, and rubbish dump yards. They are usually omnivores in
nature, but prefer cereals. Usually one pair of adult rats can produce over
hundreds of offspring within a year. But their survival is usually less and
need to eliminate them as much as possible since lone invaders become pairs
soon which will create major infestations with very short time. The contamination
along access routes or foods with urine, droppings, and filth picked up from
the environment; damage to food containers and packaging; eating food in
storage and on display; transmission of diseases, including Salmonellosis,
Leptospirosis, Toxoplasmosis, Lyme disease, rat-bite fever; rodents carry
ectoparasites, including ticks, fleas, lice and mites and are therefore also
vectors for the diseases that these carry; rodents are reservoirs for some
mosquito-borne diseases.
House
Mice
The house mice are normally found
inside the buildings which provide harbourage with warmth, food and secured
nesting places and material. It is an omnivorous animal where a single pair can
produce around 2000 baby mice within a year through horizontal multiplication
of their offspring.
Insects
Insect are the most troublesome
group which contains many different groups including flies, wasps, cockroaches,
psocids, silverfish, ants, moths, weevils and beetles. Nonetheless, there are
another group called stored product insects, who infest serials, flour and
biscuits or any made dry foods/raw materials which are under storage
conditions. Insects attack food or raw materials which become contaminated with
their excreta, webbings, and eggs or their bodies. Furthermore, flies and
cockroaches may act as hosts to transmit food poisoning organisms to high risk
or made foods. Thus, no food is completely safe from insect attacks, but
cereals, beans, flour and dried foods are among the most susceptible to
infestation.
Flies
There are many types of flies, which
can cause problems in the food industry including the Housefly, the Bushfly,
Blowfly and the Fruit Fly. Filth flies, including house flies, drain flies and
flesh flies are known to be able to carry over 100 pathogens that can cause
disease in humans, where many pathogens have been isolated from flies,
including salmonella, E. coli O157, cholera, shigella, campylobacter, listeria
and rotavirus, etc. They also carry parasitic warms and fungi. Thus, flies can
contaminate foods or raw materials in four ways; they vomit partly digested
pervious meal before feeding starts; and flies continually defecate; they also
carry bacteria on their body, legs or hairs; while their pupal cases, eggs,
maggots and dead bodies can end up in the foods.
Adult flies lay eggs in moist
organic material, for example, food scraps, animal faeces (droppings), grass
clippings or dead animals. Theeggs turn into larvae after some hours which are
called maggots, who feed on the organic material and grow quickly. After four to
five days the maggots move to dry soil and burrow down into it and turn into
pupae. A special hard protective covering called a pupal case encloses each of
the pupae while they continue to develop. Pupae are brown to black in colour
and can sometimes be mistaken for mice droppings.After four or five days, pupae
turn into adult flies. They break out of the pupal case, burrow up through the
soil to the surface and fly away. Flies are able to travel many kilometres from
their breeding place.
Typical breeding sites for houseflies
are refuse and decaying organic matter. The female housefly lays around 600
eggs at a time, which hatch within 48 hours and it takes less than two weeks
for an egg to pass maggot and pupal stages to become an adult in warm weather
conditions. The blowflies usually breed on decaying matter of animal origin,
especially meat or fish. Fruit flies generally occur in ripening fruits,
bakeries, fruit canning facilities or fruit storages, beer cellars, or may be
unwashed milk bottles. The control is carried out with removal of breeding
materials.
Wasps
Wasps are usually contaminate foods
through transmitting bacteria from their legs or bodies which are a major
nuisance in bakeries under warm weather.
Cockroaches
There are different types of
cockroaches available in different parts of the world based on different
weather conditions.
German
cockroach – Blatellagermanica
The
adult is about 12-15mm long and colour
is yellowish brownor light brown, which is one of the most
common cockroaches worldwide and is easily identifiable by two dark stripes on
the pronotum (head shield). It prefers warm, humid conditions but can infest
food production areas and equipment, food storage areas, kitchens,bakeries, hotels vehicles, offices and administrative
areas, bathrooms and especially ship’s
galleys. The female can produce around 300 eggs in entire life span of 3 to 12
months. They
are good climbers and can climb vertical glass and tiled surfaces, so can
spread quickly.
American
cockroach – Periplanetaamericana
The
largest cockroach that may infest facilities; adults are 35-50mm long and
reddish brown. It requires warm, humid environments to survive. They are found
in drains, sewers, basements, storage rooms and waste storage areas.
Oriental
cockroach – Blattaorientalis
The
adult is grows around 20-30mm long, which
are shiny dark brown to black in colour. It prefers cooler, dark and damp places
to shelter, such as basements and drains, and can be found in storage rooms and
waste storage areas. They are poor climbers on smooth surfaces but are cold
tolerant (i.e. UK) and can be found outside buildings in drains, sewers, and
external brickwork andusually found in cellars, kitchens,
bakeries, hotels, etc.The eggs are laid with case which take about two months
to hatch at 25ÂșC, and it will be prolonged in the colder climates. The female
produce around 150 eggs in the entire life cycle which usually take between 6
to 12 months to become adults depending on the climatic condition and the food
supplies.
Brown
banded cockroach – Supellalongipalpa
The
adult is only 1015mm long and looks similar to the more common German
cockroach. It needs hot humid conditions, around 27°C, to survive and outside
warm climates will infest heated buildings and appliances such as light
switches and electrical appliances.
Australian
cockroach – Periplanetaaustralasiae
A
large species similar to the American cockroach. Adults are 25-35mm long with a
reddish brown body and paler band around the pronotum (head shield); it is
common in tropical climates (probably native to Africa, not Australia) but can
survive in colder countries in warm, humid buildings such as greenhouses.
The cockroaches usually live in
groups which are omnivorous, nocturnal creatures that gives an unpleasant
characteristic odour. They are usually hide during the day time inside cracks,
crevices, ducting, false ceilings, behind hot water plumbing, electrical
equipment, behind skirtings and broken tiles. They can be detected with the presence
of fecal matter, or their smell and they don’t fly. There are over 40
pathogenic organisms have been isolated from their bodies or from the fecal,
including food poisoning organisms such as salmonella,
clostridium perfringens, Listeria,
Staphylococccus, and fungi, viruses as well as parasitic worms. They feed
on decaying matter, mould, faecal matter in sewers, from rodents and birds, and
animal carcasses, which can then be transmitted into the food production,
storage and display areas on their bodies or in excreta; they defecate along
their pathways; they frequently expel saliva on surfaces to ‘taste’ their
environment; droppings and bodily secretions stain and leave a foul odour that
can permeate infestation areas, food and packaging; cast skins and egg cases
contaminate products and packaging; droppings and shed skins contain allergens,
and heavy cockroach populations can trigger asthma attacks.Their presence can
be detected through live or dead bodies, nymphs/moths, eggs, larvae and pupae,
droppings, egg cases and smell or webbings (moths).
Psocidsor
Booklice
Psocids are small insects with 1 to
2mm in size, and colour can be varied from cream, light brown to dark brown,
which are omnivorous creatures that infest flour, grain, nuts, chocolate, fish
and meat products. They also feed moulds and yeasts where infestation may be
associated with packaging materials and pellets. The presence of booklice
usually can be detected in high humid areas.
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