| Literature DB >> 21324202 |
James C Carlson1, Richard M Engeman, Doreene R Hyatt, Rickey L Gilliland, Thomas J DeLiberto, Larry Clark, Michael J Bodenchuk, George M Linz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) are an invasive bird species known to cause damage to plant and animal agriculture. New evidence suggests starlings may also contribute to the maintenance and spread of diseases within livestock facilities. Identifying and mitigating the risk pathways that contribute to disease in livestock is necessary to reduce production losses and contamination of human food products. To better understand the impact starlings have on disease transmission to cattle we assessed the efficacy of starling control as a tool to reduce Salmonella enterica within a concentrated animal feeding operation. We matched a large facility, slated for operational control using DRC-1339 (3-chloro-4-methylaniline hydrochloride, also 3-chloro p-toluidine hydrochloride, 3-chloro-4-methylaniline), with a comparable reference facility that was not controlling birds. In both facilities, we sampled cattle feed, cattle water and cattle feces for S. enterica before and after starling control operations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21324202 PMCID: PMC3050709 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-7-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Figure 1Estimated number of European starling within pen lanes. The mean number and standard deviation of European starling estimates from the starling-controlled and reference CAFO's during pre and post DRC-1339 starling control periods. All estimates were taken from 2 CAFO's located in Moore County, Texas from 18 January through 18 February 2010.
Figure 2. The percentage of cattle water troughs testing positive on the starling-controlled and reference CAFO's during pre and post DRC-1339 starling control periods. All samples were collected from 2 CAFO's located in Moore County, Texas from 18 January through 18 February 2010.
Figure 3. The percentage of cattle feed samples testing positive on the starling-controlled and reference CAFO's during pre and post DRC-1339 starling control periods. All samples were collected from 2 CAFO's located in Moore County, Texas from 18 January through 18 February 2010.
Figure 4. The percentage of cattle fecal samples testing positive on the starling-controlled and reference CAFO's during pre and post DRC-1339 starling control periods. All samples were collected from 2 CAFO's located in Moore County, Texas from 18 January through 18 February 2010.
Salmonella serogroups by sample type
| Serogroups (% of | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | E (66.6) | C1 (48.0) | C1 (46.4) | C1 (46.1) |
| 2 | C1 (33.3) | E (34.0) | E (39.1) | E (39.1) |
| 3 | C1 & E (8.0) | B (8.7) | B (4.7) | |
| 4 | No serogroup data (6.0) | C2 (2.9) | No serogroup data (3.9) | |
| 5 | C2 (4.0) | No serogroup data (2.9) | C1 & E (3.1) | |
| 6 | C2 (3.1) | |||
| Total no. | 9 | 50 | 69 | 128 |
Salmonella serotypes by sample type
| Serotype (% of | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Montevideo (33.3) | Montevideo (36.0) | Montevideo (42.0) | Montevideo (40.6) |
| 2 | Meleagridis (33.3) | Anatum (36.0) | Anatum (18.8) | Anatum (25.7) |
| 3 | Anatum (22.2) | Rough O: e, h: 1,6 (6.0) | Not serotyped (15.9) | Not serotyped (10.9) |
| 4 | Rough O: e, h: 1,6 (11.1) | Not serotyped (6.0) | Agona (7.2) | Rough O: e, h: 1,6 (4.6) |
| 5 | Lille (4.0) | Rough O: e, h: 1,6 (4.3) | Agona (3.9) | |
| 6 | Multiple serotypes (4.0) | Multiple serotypes (4.3) | Multiple serotypes (3.9) | |
| 7 | Meunchen (2.0) | Kentucky (1.5) | Meleagridis (3.1) | |
| 8 | Meleagridis (2.0) | Kiambu (1.5) | Lille (1.6) | |
| 9 | Newport (2.0) | Lexington_var._15+ (1.5) | Newport (1.6) | |
| 10 | 3,10: nonmotile (2.0) | Newport (1.5) | 3,10: nonmotile (0.7) | |
| 11 | Rough O: gms:- (1.5) | Kentucky (0.7) | ||
| 12 | Kiambu (0.7) | |||
| 13 | Lexington_var._15+ (0.7) | |||
| 14 | Meunchen (0.7) | |||
| 15 | Rough O: gms:- (0.7) | |||
| Total no. | 9 | 50 | 69 | 128 |