Abstract

The present study was conducted to estimate the apparent prevalence of Salmonella spp. in free-ranging waterfowl that inhabitant Entre Ríos, Argentina, determine the antimicrobial resistance of the isolated, and compare the performance of two selective plating media used for Salmonella isolation. Five hundred ninety nine free-living waterfowl were sampled one time by cloacal swab from April 2014 to July 2016. Only 6 samples from waterfowl belonged to all counties sampled were positive to Salmonella spp., so the apparent prevalence was 1%. Four serovars were isolated (Salmonella ser. Typhimurium, S. ser. Schwarzengrund, S. enterica subsp. I [4,12: i: -], S. enterica subsp. IIIb [60: r: e, n, x, z15]), which were susceptible to 15 antibiotics tested and resistant to erythromycin. Furthermore, some strains showed an intermediate resistant to neomycin, ciprofloxacin and/or streptomycin. The multiple antibiotic resistances index was 0.05. For Hektoen enteric agar and Salmonella Shigella agar, the relative accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value did not show any difference between them. The agreement was good between these two plating-media and the difference between these plating-media was not statistically significant. The low prevalence of Salmonella spp. in waterfowl in Entre Rios should not be discounted, since Salmonella ser. Typhimurium was the most prevalent serovar and some free-ranging waterfowl species studied can migrate from/to different countries, increasing the possibility to cross-contaminated Salmonella to resident or other migrant birds.

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