1. Incidence of salmonellae in fecal samples of production swine and swine at slaughter plants in the United States in 1978.
- Author
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McKinley GA, Fagerberg DJ, Quarles CL, George BA, Wagner DE, and Rollins LD
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Salmonella classification, Salmonella drug effects, United States, Abattoirs, Feces microbiology, Salmonella isolation & purification, Swine microbiology
- Abstract
Nine swine slaughter plants and 19 swine production units were randomly selected for sampling from the six highest swine-producing states representing a total of 64% of the United States swine production. Three composites of 10 fresh swine fecal samples were obtained from each slaughter plant, representing three different farm sources of swine. Two composite fecal samples were collected from two different production pens from each production unit. Samples were analyzed for salmonellae. Isolated salmonellae were biochemically and serologically identified and tested for antibiotic susceptibility and resistance transfer ability. Salmonellae were recovered from swine at seven of the nine slaughter plants and 16 of the 27 composites of slaughter swine. Of the 19 production units, 3 had swine shedding salmonellae. Resistances found included streptomycin, tetracycline, and sulfadiazine. Of the 52 total isolates tested, 71% had some level of antibiotic resistance. Only 3 of 37 resistant isolated could transfer resistance under the conditions used.
- Published
- 1980
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