Abstract

Disease prevention on dairy farms has significant implications for cattle health, food security, and zoonosis. Of particular importance is the control of bovine mastitis, which can be caused by diverse bacteria, including Klebsiella, Escherichia coli, Streptococcus, and Staphylococcus spp. Despite being one of the most significant and costly cattle diseases worldwide, the epidemiology of bovine mastitis is not well understood. This study provides parallel culture-independent and culture-dependent evidence to support the carriage of opportunistically pathogenic bacteria by Stomoxys flies on dairy farms. We further show that the fly microbiota is enriched in clinically relevant taxa-the vast majority of which can be traced to the manure habitats in which flies breed. Altogether, our results identify biting flies as underrecognized carriers of bacterial taxa associated with environmental bovine mastitis and other opportunistic infections in vertebrates and offer important insights into mechanisms of microbial acquisition by these and other medically important insects.

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