A Comparison of Culturing Drag Swabs and Litter for Identification of Infections with Salmonella spp. in Commercial Chicken Flocks
- 31 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Avian Diseases
- Vol. 25 (2) , 513-516
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1589943
Abstract
The use of a culture of a 5 g litter sample and the use of a drag swab to detect Salmonellae infections in broiler and parent breeding flocks were compared to determine sensitivity of the techniques. The methods were equally sensitive in 32 breeding houses. Both identified the same sheds as being contaminated; the identical serotypes were recovered. In broiler flocks, contamination of 7 of 13 sheds was detected with drag swabs; only 5 were detected by litter culture. In a repeat experiment in broiler sheds, 3 sheds were detected as positive by the culture of litter, 9 by drag-swab culture. All sheds found positive by culture of cecae at processing were identified by drag-swab culture during the life of the broilers. Drag-swab culture was evidently a reliable and cheap method of monitoring large numbers of chicken flocks for infections with Salmonella spp.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: