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1 April 1979 Salmonella IN WILDLIFE FROM TRINIDAD AND GRENADA, W.I.
C.O.R. EVERARD, BRAJIN TOTA, DAVID BASSETT, CAMEILLE ALI
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Abstract

Forty-four of 219 animals from Trinidad and Grenada, W.I., yielded 20 serotypes of Salmonella, 16 of which are known to have been associated with human infection in the United States in recent years. Toads (Bufo marinus) provided the greatest number of isolates. Other carriers were mammals, vultures, lizards, a tree-frog and a cave cockroach.

EVERARD, TOTA, BASSETT, and ALI: Salmonella IN WILDLIFE FROM TRINIDAD AND GRENADA, W.I.
C.O.R. EVERARD, BRAJIN TOTA, DAVID BASSETT, and CAMEILLE ALI "Salmonella IN WILDLIFE FROM TRINIDAD AND GRENADA, W.I.," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 15(2), 213-219, (1 April 1979). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-15.2.213
Received: 24 July 1978; Published: 1 April 1979
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