Salmonella Brandenburg - emergence of a new strain affecting stock and humans in the South Island of New Zealand
- 22 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in New Zealand Veterinary Journal
- Vol. 52 (1) , 26-36
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00480169.2004.36387
Abstract
AIMS: To report information on the spread of a new strain of Salmonella Brandenburg, which affected livestock and humans in the South Island of New Zealand, and a series of small case studies designed to investigate potential transmission of infection. METHODS: Information on the occurrence and spread of S. Brandenburg in livestock was gathered from laboratory diagnostic submissions, from case studies on the faecal excretion rate in ewes, carrier status of black-backed gulls (Larus dominicanus), spread of S. Brandenburg organisms in sheep yards, infection in lambs going to meat plants, and from post-abortion pathological changes in the reproductive tract of ewes. RESULTS: A newly recognised strain of S. Brandenburg was first diagnosed in aborting sheep from a flock in mid Canterbury in the South Island in 1996. Subsequently, the disease spread to other farms in mid and south Canterbury in 1997 and to Southland and Otago in the lower half of the South Island in 1998–2003. In 1999, the same strain was responsible for abortions in cattle and gastroenteritis in calves and adult cattle. The same strain of bacterium also caused disease in horses, goats, deer, pigs and humans. Spread of the disease on farms was strongly associated with aborting ewes, which resulted in considerable environmental contamination. During the abortion season, black-backed gulls appeared to spread the disease to other farms. Other potential sources of infection were carrier sheep, contaminated water sources and contaminated sheep-yard dust. Damage to the reproductive tract may affect the ability of surviving ewes to conceive. CONCLUSION: Important features of this disease are its high morbidity and mortality within a flock or herd, rapid local spread and its role as an occupational, health and safety risk to farm workers and their families.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- SalmonellaBrandenburg — emergence of a variant strain on a sheep farm in the South Island of New ZealandNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 2003
- Salmonella in animals in New Zealand: the past to the futureNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 2002
- Salmonella Brandenburg in non-pregnant 8-month-old sheepNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1999
- The herring gull Larus argentatus as a likely transmitting agent of Salmonella montevideo to sheep and cattleEpidemiology and Infection, 1983
- A fatal disease outbreak in sheep associated with Salmonella enteritidis ser HavanaNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1982
- Seagulls (Larus spp.) as vectors of salmonellae: an investigation into the range of serotypes and numbers of salmonellae in gull faecesEpidemiology and Infection, 1981
- The prevalence of salmonella infection in sheep at slaughterNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1979
- An outbreak of S typhimurium in sheep and its consequencesVeterinary Record, 1976
- Salmonellosis in young calvesNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1966
- The isolation of Salmonella anatum from the pig and sheep in New ZealandNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1960