Abstract
In sheep wetted by rain, proliferation of bacteria in the skin-fleece microenvironment invariability discolours the fleece and causes a dermatitic condition known as fleecerot. The changes in population dynamics of fleece bacteria were analysed by carrying out skin washings at randomly selected sites on the back of sheep before, and at 48 h and 96 h after exposure to rain. Gram-positive rods belonging to Bacillus species (10 2–10 4 cfu/cm 2) predominated in dry fleece. Gram-positive cocci (e.g. Micrococus and Staphylococcus species) as well as Gram-negative rods (pseudomonads) were also present but in lower abundance (< 10 2 cfu/cm 2). Fleece bacterial populations generally increased in numbers during the first 24–48 h of wetting. By 96 h however, skin washings showed a preponderance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (10 4–10 6 cfu/cm 2) and to a lesser extent, pigmented Micrococcus species. Growth of fleece bacteria was associated with a characteristic green or yellow/orange staining of fleece. Fewer species of bacteria were isolated from sheep showing green staining while those animals with yellow/orange discolourations appeared to have a more mixed microflora composition. The predominance of P. aeruginosa in the wet fleece of sheep displaying either green or yellow/orange bacterial stain, never been observed to penetrate cutaneously in skin sections biopsied from fleecerot sites, it must be concluded that the sheep skin is sensitized by continuous exposure to antigens that are associated with or released by P. aeruginosa.
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