Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, Australia.
Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, Australia.
Vet Microbiol. 2013 Mar 23;162(2-4):921-929. doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2012.11.036. Epub 2012 Dec 3.
Although wild pig populations are known to sometimes be infected by Salmonella, the situation in Australia has received little attention and few population-based, planned studies have been conducted. Understanding the distribution of Salmonella infections within wild pig populations allows the potential hazard posed to co-grazing livestock to be assessed. We sampled a remote and isolated wild pig population in northwestern Australia. Faecal and mesenteric lymph node samples were collected from 651 wild pigs at 93 locations and cultured for Salmonella. The population sampled was typical of wild pig populations in tropical areas of Australia, and sampling occurred approximately halfway through the population's breeding season (38% of the 229 adult females were pregnant and 35% were lactating). Overall, the prevalence of Salmonella infection based on culture of 546 freshly collected faecal samples was 36.3% (95% CI 32.1-40.7%), and based on culture of mesenteric lymph nodes was 11.9% (95% CI, 9.4-15.0%). A total of 39 serovars (139 isolates) were identified--29 in faecal samples and 24 in lymph node samples--however neither Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium nor Salmonella Cholerasuis were isolated. There was a significant (p<0.0001) disagreement between faecal and lymph node samples with respect to Salmonella isolation, with isolation more likely from faecal samples. Prevalence differed between age classes, with piglets being less likely to be faecal-positive but more likely to be lymph node positive than adults. The distribution of faecal-positive pigs was spatially structured, with spatial clusters being identified. Study results suggest that this population of wild pigs is highly endemic for Salmonella, and that Salmonella is transmitted from older to younger pigs, perhaps associated with landscape features such as water features. This might have implications for infection of co-grazing livestock within this environment.
尽管已知野猪种群有时会感染沙门氏菌,但澳大利亚的情况并未受到太多关注,也很少有基于人群的、有计划的研究。了解沙门氏菌感染在野猪种群中的分布,可以评估其对共放牧牲畜的潜在危害。我们对澳大利亚西北部一个偏远且孤立的野猪种群进行了采样。从 93 个地点的 651 头野猪中采集了粪便和肠系膜淋巴结样本,并对其进行了沙门氏菌培养。所采样的种群与澳大利亚热带地区的野猪种群典型相似,采样发生在种群繁殖季节的中间(229 头成年雌性中,38%怀孕,35%哺乳期)。总体而言,根据 546 份新鲜采集粪便样本的培养结果,沙门氏菌感染的流行率为 36.3%(95%置信区间 32.1-40.7%),根据肠系膜淋巴结的培养结果,流行率为 11.9%(95%置信区间,9.4-15.0%)。共鉴定出 39 种血清型(139 株)——粪便样本中有 29 种,淋巴结样本中有 24 种,但未分离出肠炎沙门氏菌血清型 Typhimurium 或霍乱弧菌。粪便和淋巴结样本之间在沙门氏菌分离方面存在显著差异(p<0.0001),粪便样本中更有可能分离出沙门氏菌。不同年龄组的患病率不同,仔猪粪便阳性的可能性较小,但淋巴结阳性的可能性大于成年猪。粪便阳性猪的分布具有空间结构,确定了空间聚类。研究结果表明,该野猪种群对沙门氏菌高度地方性流行,沙门氏菌从年龄较大的猪传播给年龄较小的猪,可能与景观特征(如水源)有关。这可能对该环境中共同放牧牲畜的感染产生影响。