Abstract

Traditionally it has been difficult or impossible to collect and preserve bacterial samples of especially fastidious bacteria in mixed primary cultures, unless the samples could be transported to a laboratory within approximately 24 h. Therefore, a simple novel method for preserving swab samples until bacterial isolation can be completed in the laboratory was developed and evaluated. Pasteurellaceae bacteria were used as a representative for fastidious bacteria. A 7.5% glucose serum medium was used as freeze medium. Swab samples were soaked in the medium a maximum of 2 h after collection and stored at −20°C. As a control study, 15 samples were collected from the oral cavity of a captive brown bear. One was immediately plated, while the remaining 12 swabs were stored at −20°C for 7 days and multiples of 30 days up to 330 days prior to plating. Two samples were stored without the medium for 7 and 30 days prior to plating. From a field setting in Greenland, eight polar bear samples were collected and subsequently stored for 240 to 259 days at −20°C before incubation. Pasteurellaceae bacteria were isolated and genotyped from all samples stored in the freeze medium, indicating that the medium enabled the bacteria to survive for at least 330 days at −20°C. The 100% recovery of target organisms in the polar bear samples even following lengthy storage and transport demonstrates that the method is very useful under remote field conditions.

Highlights

  • Collection and preservation of bacterial samples in the field can be very challenging, especially due to the distance to proper laboratory facilities

  • Pasteurellaceae bacteria were used as a representative for fastidious bacteria

  • All the brown bear samples, with exception of the two samples that were frozen without the medium, showed a nonspecific mixed flora dominated by a- and b-hemolytic Streptococci, Arcanobacterium, Neisseria, and Pasteurellaceae like bacteria

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Summary

Introduction

Collection and preservation of bacterial samples in the field can be very challenging, especially due to the distance to proper laboratory facilities. When dealing with fastidious bacteria that survive poorly outside the host, quick transportation of the samples to the laboratory can be an impossible obstacle to overcome. Available culture swabs may alleviate this problem to some extent, but when the transport time exceeds 24 h, the probability of isolating host-dependent bacteria, like Pasteurellaceae, decreases rapidly (Schwarz 2008). The Pasteurellaceae family is a large and diverse family of obligate parasites most of which are closely related to a single vertebrate host (Christensen and Bisgaard 2008). Pasteurellaceae typically colonize the upper respiratory tract, the reproductive tract, and perhaps parts of the intestinal tract (Olsen et al 2005; Christensen and Bisgaard 2008).

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