United States
                    Environmental Proteciton
                    Agency
Water Engineering
Research Laboratory
Cincinnati OH 45268
                    Research and Development
EPA/600/S2-86/106 Mar. 1987
&EPA          Project  Summary
                    Regrowth  of Salmonellae  in
                    Composted  Sewage  Sludge
                    W. D. Burge, P. D. Millner,
                    N. K. Enkiri, and D. Hussong
                     Research was conducted to investi-
                    gate the regrowth of salmonellae in
                    composted sewage sludge. Though
                    composting effectively stabilizes and
                    disinfects sewage sludges, the de-
                    crease in salmonellae may be only tem-
                    porary, because this pathogen can sur-
                    vive and grow without a human or
                    other animal host.
                     Modification of an agar medium im-
                    proved our ability to detect salmonellae
                    in composts.  Salmonellae were de-
                    tected in four composts from 30 com-
                    posting sites across the United States.
                    However, all composts  supported
                    salmonella growth when sterilized by
                    radiation. These results and those by
                    others suggest that the microflora in
                    composts suppress salmonella growth.
                     To determine the nature of salmo-
                    nella suppression in composts, we in-
                    vestigated the effects of groups of the
                    compost microflora and the character-
                    istics of the substrates used by salmo-
                    nellae in composts. Results indicated
                    that suppression of salmonella re-
                    growth is mainly a result  of bacterial
                    competition for a limited number of
                    substrates that these organisms use in
                    common with salmonellae.
                     This Project Summary  was devel-
                    oped by EPA's Water Engineering Re-
                    search Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, to
                    announce key findings of the research
                    project that is  fully documented in a
                    separate report of the same title (see
                    Project Report ordering information at
                    back).

                    Introduction
                     Composting  is a very effective  proc-
                    ess for stabilizing and disinfecting
                    sewage sludge. The high temperatures
                    achieved in the composting process in-
activate pathogenic organisms and re-
sult in population densities that ap-
proach or are below analytical detection
limits. For viruses, certain bacteria, and
parasites requiring specific hosts for
survival, inactivation results in a perma-
nent decrease in their densities. For
salmonellae, which can propagate  in
the absence of specific hosts, the reduc-
tion in numbers may be only temporary.
Repopulation of compost by salmonel-
lae may occur through regrowth of the
organisms existing in the compost at an
undetectable concentration or through
the  growth of organisms  introduced
from an outside source. A likely source
may be feces from salmonella-infected
birds, reptiles,  or  other animals.
Salmonellae infecting these animals are
also infectious to humans. Thus even
though  the  composting process
achieves treatment  conditions that
meet the further pathogen reduction
criteria set forth  in 40 CFR Part 257,
"Criteria for  Classification of  Solid
Wastes Disposal Facilities and  Prac-
tices: Interim, Final, and Proposed Reg-
ulations" (as corrected in the Federal
Register of September 21, 1979); there
may still be a potential for repopulation
of composted sewage sludge by salmo-
nellae.
  Anecdotal and a few scientific reports
of salmonellae in  composted sewage
sludge have been made. Studies using a
few composts have indicated that sal-
monellae can  grow extensively only if
the  compost has been sterilized. This
finding indicates that the microflora
present in composts prevent salmonella
regrowth through  antagonistic effects
that are not understood.
  To evaluate the  potential for salmo-
nellae to grow in sewage-sludge com-

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post, we modified an agar medium used
in the  most-probable-number (MPN)
method to improve our ability to detect
salmonellae and used it to assay the sal-
monella content and salmonella growth
potential of sewage-sludge  composts
collected from 30 compost sites across
the United States.
  The factors involved in preventing
growth were studied  by methods de-
signed to segregate the microbial popu-
lations  of the compost on the basis of
temperature growth range and other
physiological and biochemical  proper-
ties, so that individual and groups of or-
ganisms could be tested for their antag-
onistic capabilities.
  To gain information on the number of
soluble, usable  substrates involved in
salmonella regrowth, kinetic  studies of
salmonella growth in composts  were
conducted and  analyzed according to
Monod's growth equations.

Modified Agar Method for
Detecting Environmental
Salmonellae by the MPN
Method
  Methods of detecting and enumerat-
ing low numbers of salmonellae from
environmental samples have used MPN
methods, which require careful selec-
tion of colonies from a plated agar
medium. Xylose lysine brilliant green
(XLBG) agar was modified to control the
loss of selectivity caused by heating the
brilliant green component.  The agar
content was increased to reduce colony
spreading. Brilliant green (BG) dye and
reagents to form the H2S indicator were
added after cooling the medium to 50°C
and just before pouring. H2S-positive
salmonellae were easily distinguished
from most other gram-negative bacteria
present in sewage sludge compost.
  Salmonella recovery from compost
increased strikingly as a result of the
suppression of  competing organisms
when BG dye was added after autoclav-
ing. In  previous analyses of  composts
and sewage sludges using brilliant
green (BG) and bismuth sulfite (BS)
agars, only 7%  of the salmonella-like
colonies picked were confirmed bio-
chemically and serologically  as salmo-
nellae.  In analyses using commercial
XLBG agar, 27% of the colonies picked
were confirmed as salmonellae. How-
ever, salmonellae were detected using
BG and BS agars in two of the samples
that had been  negative using XLBG
agar. In recent surveys of 15 composts
using the XLBG agar  in which the BG
dye was added after autoclaving, 21 of
26 (81%) of salmonella-like colonies
picked were confirmed biochemically
and serologically as salmonellae.
  The use of modified XLBG agar has
resulted in fewer nonsalmonellae being
picked for further MPN analysis and has
greatly reduced the work load associ-
ated with the MPN method. Direct plat-
ing was possible for enumerating
salmonellae in laboratory composts
containing about 103 or more salmonel-
lae.

Growth of Salmonellae in 30
Composted Sewage Sludges
  Sewage sludge composts from 30
municipalities were sampled,  and 4
samples (12%) contained salmonellae.
Salmonellae inoculated into the com-
posts  died out unless the compost had
been  sterilized. In radiation-sterilized
composts, the salmonellae  grew.
Growth and death rates were found to
be moisture and flora  associated. The
growth and death rates for antibiotic-
resistant salmonellae were the same as
those  of nonresistant strains. In non-
sterile air-dry composts, salmonellae
persisted longer than in  nonsterile
moist  composts. It was concluded that
the active, indigenous flora of composts
establish a barrier to colonization by
salmonellae, and that in the absence of
competing flora, reinoculated salmonel-
lae may grow to potentially hazardous
densities.

Microbial Suppression of
Salmonella Regrowth
  Recent studies of a few composts and
the studies of this report have indicated
that the microflora of composts sup-
press  the regrowth of salmonellae. In
this work, compost microflora were ex-
amined for the antagonistic effect of in-
dividual microorganisms and groups of
microorganisms on salmonella growth
in compost.
  Compost microflora from different
temperature zones in compost piles
were compared for their abilities to in-
hibit salmonella growth. Pure culture
isolates of compost microbes were
tested individually in agar plates and in
groups in sterile and experimental com-
posts  to determine their contribution to
suppression. The  microflora were re-
moved from the compost in extracts,
fractionated by centrifugation and filtra-
tion, and reintroduced into sterile com-
post to compare the activities of the dif-
ferent fractions on salmonella growth.
  Of several hundred isolates from
compost, 23 bacteria, 61 actinomycetes^
and 42 fungi were chosen to represent a
range of morphologically and taxonom-
ically different compost microorgan-
isms. None of the bacteria or actino-
mycetes inhibited salmonella growth in
agar-plate inhibition assays. In contrast,
six fungal isolates  did, but  no growth
inhibition was evident when three of the
fungi, chosen because they expressed
the greatest antagonism, were inocu-
lated with or  before salmonella into
sterile compost.
  The capability of microorganisms
from different compost temperature
regimes to inhibit  salmonella growth
was  determined.  Compost from the
70°C zone of a compost pile did not sup-
press salmonella  growth. Compost
from a 55°C adiabatic  incubator was
more suppressive, and compost from a
curing pile from a surface area that was
near ambient temperature  was com-
pletely suppressive.
  Studies  involving the size fractiona-
tion of the flora obtained in compost ex-
tracts again showed the lack of the abil-
ity of fungi to suppress salmonella
growth and indicated that although the
actinomycetes suppressed growth  to
some extent, gram-negative bacteria*
played a  larger role.  Of  the gram{
negative  bacteria, the coliforms were
much more effective than the noncoli-
form organisms.
  Given the diversity of the microbial
population of cured compost at ambient
temperature, it was concluded that
salmonella regrowth would be negligi-
ble. Because total  inhibition is not re-
lated to the activities of any single
group of microorganisms, no microbial
assay can be recommended to deter-
mine the capability of a compost to sup-
press salmonella regrowth.
Influence of Substrate on
Salmonella Regrowth
  The kinetics of salmonella growth in
suspensions and extracts of irradiation-
sterilized composts were studied to de-
termine the number of substrates and
the relative amounts of the substrates
used. Three composts from  widely sep-
arated compost sites in the United
States were used. Initial studies showed
that  growth of salmonellae  in suspen-
sions of compost did not appear to  be
first  order; but growth  in extracts was
(p <  0.01), indicating a soluble substrate
and an insoluble substrate that became
solubilized as growth proceeded in the.
presence of the compost solids.     m

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  The magnitudes of the  growth-rate
constants obtained using the extracts
were sensitive to the quantity of com-
post used up to a maximum amount,
and a hyperbolic relationship was found
when growth-rate constants were plot-
ted against the amount of compost ex-
tracted (Figure 1A). Plotting growth-rate
constants  against the  maximum
amount of salmonella growth brought
some of the outlying  data  points  in
closer to the hypothetical curve (Figure
1B).
  The linear forms of the hyperbolic
curves generated by the data all ap-
peared to fall  on a single curve (Fig-
ure 2). The correlation  coefficients for
                              the three  curves  all exceeded  0.997.
                              Models involving multiple versus single
                              parameters were tested for relative fit of
                              the data to the regression line of  Fig-
                              ure 2. The correlation coefficient of a
                              model with three separate intercepts
                              and three separate  regression coeffi-
                              cients was 0.9988,  whereas that for one
                              combined  equation (one intercept  and
                              one regression coefficient)  was 0.9977.
                              Although the  multiple parameters im-
                              proved the fit, the difference was so
                              small that on the  basis of parsimony,
                              the simpler model combining the three
                              equations to yield a single intercept and
                              a single regression coefficient was  pre-
                              ferred.
Figure 1.   Growth-rate constants (k, h V for salmonellae as plotted against: A. amount of
           compost extract added and B. total amount of salmonellae gro win (compost 6175,
           open circles; compost 6266, closed circles, and compost 6252, triangles).
     2.0
    1.6
     1.2
    0.8
    0.4
                            —I	'   '  —I	'   '   f
0    0.4     0.8    1.2    1.6    2.0    2.4    2.8

                       Wscfu/mL
                                                                 5.6
    2.0
    1.6
    1.2
    0.8
    0.4
        0     20     40    60     80    100   120    140

                                Compost mg/mL
                                                     200
  The results of this study showed that
it is possible to extract a water-soluble
substrate from compost that will sup-
port first-order growth of salmonellae.
The first-order nature of the kinetics and
the combined data for the three com-
posts used suggest that there is a single
substrate among the composts support-
ing salmonella growth. The identifica-
tion of this substrate and the testing for
its presence in  other  composts might
possibly furnish valuable information
as to the factors involved in the re-
growth of salmonellae in composts.

Conclusions
  Selecting salmonella colonies when
enumerating low numbers of salmonel-
lae in sewage-sludge and compost sam-
ples can be difficult because of the
growth of organisms that mimic salmo-
nellae. This difficulty can be greatly alle-
viated by modification of the standard
XLBG agar medium. The modification
involves using high concentrations  of
BG dye that has not  been heated be-
yond 50°C.
  Studies of composts collected from
30 composting  sites throughout the
United States show that inhibition of the
growth  of salmonellae by the indige-
nous microflora of composts is a gen-
eral phenomenon.
  When the complete microflora  of
compost (bacteria,  actinomycetes,
fungi, and protozoa) are present or in-
troduced into sterile compost, they fully
suppress the regrowth of salmonellae.
A  major proportion  of  suppression
comes from the coliforms, with comple-
menting activity from other gram-
negative bacteria. Thermophilic and
mesophilic  actinomycetes also supple-
ment the suppressive activity,  but the
effect of fungi is negligible. The contri-
bution, if any, by protozoa was not de-
fined.
  Three composts from widely sepa-
rated  composting sites in the United
States contained water-extractable sub-
strates that supported the growth  of
Salmonella typhimurium. Kinetic stud-
ies of salmonella growth indicate that
these substrates in the different com-
posts are very similar, if  not identical,
and that total salmonella growth is a
sensitive assay for their concentration
in  composts.

Recommendations
  Modification of the xylose lysine (XL)
agar base (agar increased to 2% and 6 to
7 ppm BG dye added to the autoclaved

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Figure 2.    A plot of the population and rate-constant data of Figure IB according to the
           linear form of Monod's equation (see Fig. 1 for meaning of symbols).
       7.5
      1.0
      0.5
medium after cooling to 50°C) appears
to provide a useful alternative to other
plating media for salmonella assay of
sewage sludges and  sewage-sludge
composts. Increasing the BG dye con-
tent of the modified XLBG to 9 ppm was
found to increase the  effectiveness in
discriminating for salmonella colony
growth. We suggest,  however, that
each user run a study to determine what
concentration works best for salmonella
measurement. Additional  studies are
recommended to compare the recovery
of salmonellae  from similar samples
(i.e., sludges, composts) with other pro-
cedures. Also, comparison of the modi-
fied medium and other media to recover
indigenous salmonellae is  recom-
mended.
  The resident microflora in the com-
posts apparently provide a safety factor
preventing the colonization of  sewage-
sludge composts by salmonellae. It has
been suggested that composts be steril-
ized  by irradiation. We suggest that
complete sterilization may result in
unchecked growth of salmonellae if the
composts become inoculated. The pos-
sibility that  partial sterilization  may de-
stroy pathogens and yet inhibit salmo-
nella growth needs evaluation.
  The fungi play essentially no role in
suppressing the growth of salmonellae
introduced into composts. Schemes to
prevent or control fungal growth can be
used if they do not eliminate gram-
negative bacteria,  particularly  coli-
forms, from the compost.
  The  findings that bacteria  most
closely related to salmonellae play the
major role in suppressing salmonella
growth and that similar water-soluble
substrates in the three composts stud-
ied support salmonella growth suggest
that a study to determine the identity of
these substrates may furnish the key to
understanding  and perhaps controlling
the regrowth of salmonellae in com-
posts.
  Studies are recommended to deter-
mine the contribution of protozoans
and other parasites for suppressing sal-
monella regrowth in composted  sew-
age sludge.
  The full report was submitted in fulfill-
ment of Interagency Agreements EPA
No.  DW21930587-01-3-1 and USDA
No. AD-12-F-4-A029 by the U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture  under the partial
sponsorship  of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.

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     W. D. Burge.  P. D. Mi liner, and N. K.  Enkiri are with the U.S. Department
       of Agriculture, Beltsville,  MD 20705;  and D. Hussong is with the Maryland
       Environmental Service, Annapolis. MD 21401.
     Gerald Stern was the EPA Project Officer (see below for present contact).
     The complete report, entitled "Regrowth of Salmonellae in Composted Sewage
       Sludge," (Order No. PB 87-129 532/AS; Cost: $13.95,  subject  to change)
       will be available only from:
            National Technical Information Service
            5285 Port Royal Road
            Springfield, VA 22161
            Telephone: 703-487-4650
     For further information Albert D. Venosa, can be contacted at:
            Water engineering Research Laboratory
            U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
            Cincinnati, OH 45268
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Center for Environmental Research
Information
Cincinnati OH 45260
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EPA/600/S2-86/106
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