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31 March 2020 SALMONELLA SPP. INFECTION IN PSITTACIDAE AT A WILDLIFE REHABILITATION CENTER IN THE STATE OF MATO GROSSO DO SUL, BRAZIL
Michelli Lopes de Souza, Mateus Lotério Coelho, Angélica Oliveira da Silva, Lucas Bezerra da Silva Azuaga, Cláudia Regina Macedo Coutinho Netto, Juliana Arena Galhardo, Cássia Rejane Brito Leal, Carlos Alberto do Nascimento Ramos
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Abstract

The growing interest in wild birds as pets and the increasingly complex interspecific relationships due to human activities in wild environments underscore the need for better knowledge about the health of these animals. Salmonella stands out among the infectious agents of considerable importance to both animal and human health. The importance of these enterobacteria to the health of humans and livestock animals has long been known. In wild birds in countries such as Brazil, however, little is known regarding the frequency of infection and the main serotypes of occurrence. In the present study, the frequency of infection and the main serotypes of Salmonella spp. were investigated in 258 birds at a wild animal rehabilitation center using conventional microbiological methods and molecular diagnostic techniques. Four birds infected with Salmonella enterica were identified using PCR. The birds were of the species Brotogeris chiriri, Ara ararauna, and Eupsittula aurea. Sequencing of DNA revealed identity with the Javiana, Newport, and Arizonae serotypes. These results are of considerable importance to the implementation of management and control measures directed at human and animal health.

© Wildlife Disease Association 2020
Michelli Lopes de Souza, Mateus Lotério Coelho, Angélica Oliveira da Silva, Lucas Bezerra da Silva Azuaga, Cláudia Regina Macedo Coutinho Netto, Juliana Arena Galhardo, Cássia Rejane Brito Leal, and Carlos Alberto do Nascimento Ramos "SALMONELLA SPP. INFECTION IN PSITTACIDAE AT A WILDLIFE REHABILITATION CENTER IN THE STATE OF MATO GROSSO DO SUL, BRAZIL," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 56(2), 288-293, (31 March 2020). https://doi.org/10.7589/2019-06-171
Received: 24 June 2019; Accepted: 1 October 2019; Published: 31 March 2020
KEYWORDS
animal health
Psittacidae
Salmonella
zoonosis
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