Comunidad de Negocios Internacionales relacionados con la producción animal
Site:
Aquaculture Mycotoxins Poultry Industry Pig Industry Dairy Cattle Feed
Technical Articles / Technical Articles' List / Back to Pets
 

Water activity as a tool for predicting and controlling the stability of pet foods

Readers' Rating: (See details)  Rate this article

Send enviar   (2 Sent)

Who saw this article? New!


Author: R.A. TIMMONS (Courtesy of Alltech Inc.)

Publication date: 07/23/2007


‘Food safety’ was one of many buzz phrases for 2005. As 2006 rolls forward, we can see that the attention focused on the safety of food is here to stay. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act requires that pet foods, like human foods, be pure and wholesome, containing no harmful or deleterious substances.

Consumers are becoming increasingly aware of the quality aspects of what they eat, as well as the quality of what they feed their beloved pets. One important aspect of food quality is the stability of the final product. Changes in physical, chemical or microbiological properties of food can be considered loss of stability. Water activity (Aw) is one of several important parameters that affect stability of foods.

Water activity is a measure of the free moisture in a foodstuff. It is also defined as the quotient of the water vapor pressure of the substance divided by the vapor pressure of pure water at the same temperature (US FDA, 2005). Free moisture can be explained as water that is available to participate in physical, chemical and biological reactions.

Water activity is not to be confused with moisture content. Moisture content is the combination of free and bound moisture. The relationship between moisture and water activity depends on the specific material. Silicon dioxide, for example, could absorb 50% moisture and maintain a very low water activity while crystalline sucrose absorbs little water until it reaches an Aw of 0.80. Characteristics of individual ingredients can be very important and will be discussed in this paper.


Role of water activity

MICROBIOLOGICAL CONTROL

Water activity plays a role in the microbial stability of ingredients and final pet foods. Bacteria, molds and yeast require water for growth; and every microorganism has a minimum water activity below which it will not grow. Table 1 details the level of water activity needed to inhibit different types of microorganisms (Fontana, 2000). A water activity of less than 0.85 is needed in food in order to avoid regulatory attention. At a water activity of less than 0.85, a food is considered non-hazardous because there is not enough available water to support pathogen growth.

Water activities of many common ingredients and categories of pet foods are shown in Table 2. Dry pet food and hard treats typically are in the 0.40-0.45 Aw range. At this low level of available water (<0.60 Aw), microbial stability is not an issue. Canned foods, however, are typically higher than 0.85 Aw and must be treated as acidified foods. Water activities of less than 0.85, while considered non-hazardous from the standpoint of pathogenic bacterial growth, will still support the growth of many yeasts and molds.

Growth of these microorganisms can cause spoilage and physical deterioration. Soft pet foods and kibbles typically fall in this intermediate range (0.60-0.85 Aw). Supplementary processing such as pasteurization, pH control or addition of preservatives is necessary for protection of these foods. It often becomes a formulation tradeoff between maintaining a moist, chewy food and the added costs of preservatives and/or processing.


Table 1. Microorganisms and the water activities at which they are typically inhibited.


Fontana, 2000



Table 2. Water activities of some common foods and ingredients.





MOLD AND TOXINS

Mold can grow at water activity levels as low as 0.61. Types of mold, temperature and water activity play a role in determining growth characteristics. For example, Penicillium roqueforti germinated at 0.82 Aw at 25°C, 0.86 Aw at 30°C and was unable to germinate at 37°C. Eurotium repens germinated at 0.70 Aw at 30°C, but at 25 and 37°C, the minimum water activity for germination was 0.74. These fungi all grew faster under acidic rather than neutral pH conditions (Gock et al., 2003).

Toxins, notably mycotoxins in the case of feedstuffs, may be formed during the course of microbial growth, but not below 0.80 Aw (Lowe and Kershaw, 1995). Formation of mycotoxins depends on the type of mold, substrate and storage conditions, which include pH, temperature and water activity. A test of dry cereal-based pet foods and wild bird seed by Scudamore et al. (1997) for the presence of aflatoxin and ochratoxin found that 84% of these foods contained amounts that were below detectable limits. Ochratoxins were found in 10% of the samples at low levels. Penicillium, Eurotium and Aspergillus were the main genera of mold present on higher moisture samples of the food.

Mycotoxins can be formed on cereal grains such as corn and wheat. Processing temperatures can kill the mold but will not remove toxins that are already formed.

Testing of raw materials can help to limit the amount of toxins in food. Sampling can be very difficult because pockets of mold growth, and therefore mycotoxin formation, can occur during storage and transport. Mycotoxin formation can also occur during storage of the final food. Development of mycotoxins can be avoided by keeping the final water activity below 0.8.


INFESTATION

Insects are another potential problem during storage of pet foods, which in some cases can be controlled by water activity. Mites are commonly found in some food ingredients and have the ability to survive through some processing steps. Mites may be active at 5°C above 0.65 Aw, at 25° above 0.63 Aw and at 40°C above 0.60 Aw (Decagon, 2003). Dry pet foods and treats, which are well below 0.60 Aw, should remain free of mites.


CHEMICAL STABILITY

Water activity also influences chemical stability. Non-enzymatic browning, known as the Maillard reaction, is a chemical reaction between simple sugars and amino acids, which results in increasing color. As Figure 1 illustrates, non-enzymatic browning occurs between Aw 0.3 and 0.8. Browning leads to changes in appearance as well as to the formation of off-flavors. Enzymes can also lead to reactions in food, leading to off-flavors.

Enzyme reactions are substantially slowed at water activity levels of 0.8 or lower.




Figure 1. Reaction rates in foods as a function of water activity.



PHYSICAL STABILITY

Physical stability is extremely dependent on water activity. Dried foods will come to a final equilibrium with their environment. If the relative humidity of the environment is higher than the equilibrium water activity of the product, the product will take on water until it reaches equilibrium with the environment. If this new water activity is above the critical limit for the food, it will begin to cake, which is unacceptable to the consumer.

A critical water activity limit should be determined for each new product. This can be established by creating a water absorption isotherm (Figure 2). An isotherm is created at a set temperature by examining water activity readings vs. moisture readings for a product.

From the isotherm, the water moisture level that the product will reach at a specific relative humidity at a set temperature can be established. If the moisture level associated with the critical limit (physical characteristics change) for a product is noted, storage/packaging conditions can be established. A product with a critical limit above realistic storage conditions will not need special packaging. Products with a lower critical limit might need airtight sealed containers.




Figure 2. Typical water isotherm of a product.



Individual ingredients can also affect the final product stability. Ingredients with different initial water activities will come to equilibrium in the product. A spray-dried product with an initial 0.2 Aw mixed with an intermediate ingredient of 0.5 Aw will reach equilibrium at a value between the two. The higher activity ingredient will lose available water to the lower activity ingredient. The characteristics of each ingredient could change.

Again, this depends on the critical limits of each individual ingredient, as well as the critical limit of the final product. Salwin (1963) developed an equation using water activity and moisture from individual component isotherms to predict the water activity of the mixture at equilibrium (Figure 3). In order for the prediction to represent the actual situation, isotherms must be developed at the temperature at which the final product will be held. Packaging should be such that the environmental humidity need not be considered a factor.




Figure 3. Salwin equation for predicting water activity at equilibrium.



It is typical for some pet foods/treats to have a mixture of soft chewy pieces and some harder pieces. The harder pieces are considered valuable for their ability to keep teeth cleaned, while the softer pieces are considered more palatable. When mixed, the two materials will come to equilibrium.

In order for this mix to remain stable, the individual components and final product must be developed in order that the final equilibrium water activity will allow the two components to retain their original characteristics.

This has been the subject of many patents on both the pet food and human food sides.

Specialty packaging, processing and ingredients have all been used in order to obtain the goal of maintaining a stable final product.

Transfer of water between ingredients is a common cause of caking. The transfer of water from an ingredient with higher water activity to an ingredient with a lower water activity causes one of the ingredients to reach its critical limit, initiating caking. Storage factors such as temperature can change the rate of this reaction. Lower temperatures will slow the reaction, while higher temperatures speed reaction rate.


Product development


Food technologists will utilize all of the information above when developing a new product. The first goal is to establish the type of product (low, intermediate, or high moisture) to be produced. Producers of a low moisture food will not need to worry about microbiological issues. Water activity will be a factor in this food with regard to physical characteristics. The Salwin equation in Figure 3 is useful in predicting the final water activity of a mixture of ingredients. Addition of ingredients such as salt, sugar, and silica can help adjust the final water activity to a desired endpoint.

An intermediate food is considered safe with regard to pathogen contamination, but is subject to spoilage organisms, enzymatic and non-enzymatic breakdown and physical changes. The US Code of Federal Regulations (21 CFR 110.80 (14)) states that intermediate foods that rely on the control of water activity for preventing growth of undesirable microorganisms shall be processed to, and maintained at, a safe moisture level.

Monitoring water activity, adjusting the soluble solids:water ratio or controlling packaging can accomplish this. Further drying, or use of solutes such as salt, sucrose or sorbitol could be used to lower the water activity; however this might not produce the desired final product characteristics.

Preservatives such as sodium benzoate, propionic acid and potassium sorbate can be used to control microbial growth. Factors such as pH, target microorganisms, taste and cost can be used to decide on the appropriate preservative. Water isotherms should be used to predict the physical stability of the product, taking critical limits for desired characteristics into account.

High moisture foods (>0.85 Aw), such as canned pet foods, must be processed in conformance with low acid canned food regulations (21 CFR, Part 113). These regulations state that critical factors such as water activity must be used in conjunction with thermal processing.

Conclusion

In order to produce a pet food that is both commercially viable and safe, water activity must be used as both a development tool and a quality assurance mechanism.

Water activity values are an extremely important consideration in any type of pet food, since water activity plays a role in the physical, chemical and biological stability of the product.

Several methods have been given for evaluating and determining the effect of water activity on a particular formula.

The challenge to the pet food industry is to use the right combination of ingredients, processing and packaging to create products that meet safety and quality standards, meet cost parameters and still maintain integrity of design to satisfy consumers.


References

Decagon. 2003. Water activity and pet foods. Water Activity News, p. 6.

Fontana, A.J. 2000. Water activity’s role in food safety and quality. Decagon Application notes. http://www.decagon.com.

Gock, M.A., A.D. Hocking, J.I. Pitt and P.G. Poulos. 2003. Influence of temperature, water activity and pH on growth of some xerophilic fungi. Int. J. Food Microbiol. 81(1):11-9.

Lowe, J.A. and S.J. Kershaw. 1995. Water activity-moisture content relationship as a predictive indicator for control of spoilage in commercial pet diet components. Anim. Feed Sci. Tech. 56:187-194.

Salwin, H. 1963. Moisture levels required for stability in dehydrated foods. Food Tech. 17:1114-1121.

Scudamore, K.A., M.T. Hetmanski, S. Nawax, J. Naylor and S. Rainbird. 1997. Determination of mycotoxins in pet foods sold for domestic pets and wild birds using linked column immunoassay cleanup and HPLC. Food Addit. Contam. 14(2):175-86.

US Food and Drug Administration. 2005. Code of Federal Regulations, CFR 21, Part 110. Washington, DC.

Author: R.A. TIMMONS
North American Biosciences Center, Alltech Inc., Nicholasville, Kentucky, USA


Author: R.A. TIMMONS (Courtesy of Alltech Inc.)

Publication date: 07/23/2007

Readers' Rating: (See details)  Rate this article

   Send   enviar   (2 Sent)

Who saw this article? New!


DISCUSSIONS ON THIS ISSUE.

 Make a comment about this issue

 07/24/2007  
ali eskandaripur Qualify this professional
None
Phone: +98 (0)21 66 94 62 50/4 - Tehran - Iran
Offered Professional Services (Contact)
Hi.
A new and practical article about the stability of food.
The difference between moisture and water activity was interesting to me.

Ali Eskandaripur
Livestock and Poultry Magazine
Damparvaran.Tehran, Iran
Answer Checked by Engormix.com
ENGOREART MAS 20080706
 
  Related Products
 
Biomin (Austria)
Biomin Specials
Biomin® Specials are feed supplements which can be ively used, whenever problems occur. Biomin® Specials are integral parts of the VarioBiotic System....
 
 
Jiangsu Zhengchang Group Co. Ltd. (China)
Dry Extruder (SPHG2500a)
Features: 1) Main applications: it is applicable for raw material pretreatment, such as extruding full fat soybean, soybean cake and cotton see...
 
 
VICAM ()
OchraTest WB
OchraTest WB Ochratoxin Testing System Ochratoxin A is amycotoxin produced by the fungus Aspergillus ochraceous and also by several species of Penic...
 
 
VICAM ()
Mycotoxin Basic Equipment Package
Supplies and instrumentation needed to run all of VICAM’s mycotoxin tests Ordering Information Cat. No. Description 1 G8000 Series-4EX Fluoromete...
 
 
VICAM ()
Microbiological Testing ListerTest
ListerTest® helps detect and control Listeria by making testing of foods and the processing environment easy and rapid. ListerTest detects injured Lis...
 
 
Helica Biosystems, Inc. (United States of America)
Low-Matrix Mycotoxin Kits
Aflatoxins and ochratoxin A in commodities which pose difficult problems in measurement by conventional “rapid” ELISA methods. The so-called rapid EL...
 
 
Helica Biosystems, Inc. (United States of America)
TOTAL AFLATOXIN ASSAY – LOW MATRIX
The HELICA Low Matrix Total Aflatoxin Assay is a solid phase direct competitive enzyme immunoassay. An aflatoxin specific antibody optimized to cross ...
 
 
Sweet Manufacturing Company (United States)
Flite-Veyor Drag Conveyors
STANDARD INLET Standard angle flange inlets are recommended for use on applications where material flow is controlled before entering the conveyor...
 
 
4B Braime Elevator Components (United Kingdom)
Misalignment monitors
A large range of misalignment monitors for elevators and conveyors. Misalignment Monitors for Belt Conveyors: - A400 Elite & B400 Elite * Accep...
 
 
Biorigin (Brazil)
HiCell
It is a product obtained from the fermentation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain, especially selected for animal nutrition purposes. Its production...
 
 
Biorigin (Brazil)
Selemax
It is a dry inactive yeast containing high levels or organic selenium. Selemax increasing selenium levels in animal products and in the blood. In poul...
 
 
Norel & Nature Nutrición (Spain)
FLAVOURS AND SWEETENERS
WE HAVE A WIDE RANGE OF QUALITY FLAVOURS, AROMAS AND SWEETENERS FOR ALL SPECIES. THESE PROVIDE KNOWN BENEFITS TO THE ANIMAL: Brand names: APET...
 
 
Feed Technology Solutions (United States of America)
Consulting Services
Feed Technology Solutions (FTS) is an organization that specializes in providing Technical Assistance and Strategic Consulting Services to the Agri-In...
 
 
Feed Technology Solutions (United States of America)
Feed Production Technology / Processes
Feed Technology Solutions (FTS) is an organization that specializes in providing Technical Assistance and Strategic Consulting Services to the Agri-In...
 
 
Trilogy Analytical Laboratory Inc. (United States of America)
Analytical Services
Trilogy Analytical Laboratory offers a wide range of specialty assays. The Mission is to be the recognized leader for providing analytical excellence ...
 
 
Jiangsu Muyang Group Co. Ltd. (China)
TPH200 Extruder
A typical extruder for raw material treatment, which is suitable for processing various kinds of raw materials through adjusting the configuratio...
 
 
PFEUFFER instruments for quality control of cereals and seeds (Germany)
grain moisture meter Granomat
For the determination of moisture content and bulk density (specific weight) of the whole grain. Just put the sample into the funnel, choose the reque...
 
 
PFEUFFER instruments for quality control of cereals and seeds (Germany)
Inline Sampler DVB
Automatic sampler for cereals, feedstuffs, seeds and similar bulk flow solids. • 100 representative sample, thereby maximising control. • Optimum pr...
 
 
PFEUFFER instruments for quality control of cereals and seeds (Germany)
Sample Cleaner MLN/SLN
Sample Cleaner model MLN for testing of grain samples for impurities • accurate assessment of the total consignment. • Price can be negotiated on th...
 
 
Radar Automation NV (Belgium)
Integra
Overall solution for management of production and administration. Sales Orders Processing, Pricing & Invoicing, Production & Conditioning, Reception ...
 
 
Van Aarsen International BV (Netherlands)
Flight Conveyor
First class transport Dust proof construction Head incl. speed control Driving section equipped with overflow safety device Forged ...
 
 
Meriden Animal Health Limited (United Kingdom)
Orego-Stim Liquid and Powder
Orego-Stim® is unique. Its production utilises only natural oregano etheric oils obtained by steam distillation of the leaves and flowers of a cultiva...
 
 
Engineered System & Equipment (United States of America)
Extruders
The INSTA-PRO MODEL 2000R EXTRUDER is capable of cooking, expanding, sterilizing, dehydrating amd texturizing a wide range of products. By creating he...
 
 
Feedsoft Corporation (United States of America)
Feedsoft Professional®
Feedsoft® is the ideal tool for anyone who wants to easily create least-cost feed formulations. The system allows you to maintain a list of available ...
 
 
Datastor Systems Ltd (United Kingdom)
PC4000
Process Control System for the control of Animal and Pet Food factories. Systems can be bacthing and Mixing,Intake/Receiving of materials, Routing and...
 
 
Datastor Systems Ltd (United Kingdom)
Moisture Manager 4000
Datastor has now developed ‘Moisture Manager 4000’ , a product designed to deliver the benefits of in-line moisture control based upon the Doescher te...
 
 
  Technical Articles
  Protecting Your Pet from Pesticides
This guide explains precautionary measures that can be used to protect pets from injury due to pesticides used in and around the h ...

Boosting Immune Response in Dogs: a Role for Dietary Mannan Sugars
The ability of an animal to fight infection and disease is determined by the capacity of its immune systems to respond to invading ...

Mineral Nutrition of Domestic Cats
The domestic cat is believed to have evolved on a diet that consisted mainly of animal tissue. The relatively constant composition ...

Obesity and diabetes: not just human problems
Obesity is a condition in which the relative balance between the amount of lean body mass and the amount of fat tissue has been di ...

Water activity as a tool for predicting and controlling the stability of pet foods
‘Food safety’ was one of many buzz phrases for 2005. As 2006 rolls forward, we can see that the attention focused on the safety of ...

Using genomic biology to study brain aging and cognitive function
Over the past few decades, canine life span has continued to increase, due in part to improved veterinary care, vaccination progra ...

The importance of nutrition in coat quality and skin health of dogs and cats
Nutrition plays a key role in maintaining healthy skin and coat condition in dogs and cats. The hair coat of an animal is its firs ...

Major concerns in comparative animal nutrition
THE NEED FOR NUTRITIONAL INFORMATIONDuring the past 150 years, the knowledge base to support livestock producers in the area of an ...

Nutritional influences on gut microbial populations
Nutrition is the most important factor influencing the composition and metabolic activity of the intestinal microflora. This impor ...

Adipose tissue transcriptomics: application to pet obesity
The obesity epidemic that has been sweeping the human population is now highly prevalent in our dog and cat populations as well. I ...

See all...

 
 Related Forums
 Article: Water activity as a tool for predicting and controlling the stability of pet foods

Article: A changing landscape: the pet food market in Europe

Article: Functional foods and nutraceuticals for cats and dogs

News: First Rate Food Choices for Fido

Article: Feeding the racing greyhound

Article: Clinical implications of mycotoxicosis in companion animals

News: The Essentials of a Dog's Healthy Coat

AREAS
Home | Aquaculture | Mycotoxins | Poultry Industry | Pig Industry | Dairy Cattle | Feed
Home | Events | Companies and Products | Home | Forums | Technical Articles | Professionals Guide | News

Copyright © 1999-2008 Engormix.com - All Rights Reserved.