Abstract
Background: Food-borne outbreaks have been associated with sourcing unsafe food.
Therefore, the first preventative strategy should be to source safe food. Even if the sourced food is
safe, measures need to be put in place to ensure that it remains safe during the transfer, storage,
preparation and serving activities that follow. An understanding of the ship food supply and transfer chain will help to illustrate the points at which the food can become contaminated en route to
the point of consumption. Objectives: The study was conducted in selected sea port in the core
Niger Delta to assessed the microbiological quality of food served at different ship galley to crew
and passengers and compared it to standard. Methods: Samples of food were taken from three (Port
Harcourt Area one (PHSP), Warri (WSP) and Koko (KSP)) seaports within the South-South zone for
laboratory analysis to uncover food spoilage microorganisms capable of causing disease outbreak
among ship which could result to Transborder diseases. Eleven samples of different ready to eat
food were collected from the locations, which included cooked rice; fried fish, irish potato porridge,
vegetable soup, griki, pepper soup, fried irish potato, salad and bread were collected randomly. The
samples were prepared and analyzed using standard procedures. Mean viable counts of aerobic
and anaerobic bacteria were determined, ranging from (13×103cfu/g to 78×104 cfu/g) for ready to
eat food. Results: Based on the finding KSP I, KSP J and KSP K food samples had the highest bacterial contamination on food while WSP F, WSP G and WSP H food samples had the least with the
following isolates Salmonella spp, Nocardia spp, Shigella spp, Listeria spp, Bacillus cereus, Leuconostoc spp, Acinetobacter spp, Acetobacter spp, campylobacter spp, Clostridium spp and Vibrio spp which revealed that the isolates were susceptible to any of these antibiotics Septrin, Chloramphenicol, Gentamycin, Tarvid, Streptomycin, Reflacin, Augumetin, Ceporex, Nalidixic acid, Ampicillin, Ciproflox, Penicillin and Erythromycin. Conclusion: Thus, ships operators and regulatory body are expected to take all practicable measures to ensure that they do not receive unsafe or unsuitable food and maintain
adequate food temperature at all time.