Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China. / Li, Kang; Petersen, Gitte; Barco, Lisa; Hvidtfeldt, Kristian; Liu, Liping; Dalsgaard, Anders.

I: Food Microbiology, Bind 65, 08.2017, s. 19-24.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Li, K, Petersen, G, Barco, L, Hvidtfeldt, K, Liu, L & Dalsgaard, A 2017, 'Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China', Food Microbiology, bind 65, s. 19-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014

APA

Li, K., Petersen, G., Barco, L., Hvidtfeldt, K., Liu, L., & Dalsgaard, A. (2017). Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China. Food Microbiology, 65, 19-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014

Vancouver

Li K, Petersen G, Barco L, Hvidtfeldt K, Liu L, Dalsgaard A. Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China. Food Microbiology. 2017 aug.;65:19-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014

Author

Li, Kang ; Petersen, Gitte ; Barco, Lisa ; Hvidtfeldt, Kristian ; Liu, Liping ; Dalsgaard, Anders. / Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China. I: Food Microbiology. 2017 ; Bind 65. s. 19-24.

Bibtex

@article{ab859a15242140969c60e16d6e4e61fd,
title = "Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China",
abstract = "Integrated tilapia-pig farming, which uses manure from pigs as fertilizers in fish pond, is a traditional and common production system practised by small-scale farmers in South-east Asia. Although such systems may be environmentally sustainable, they also pose potential food safety hazards including transmission of faecal zoonotic pathogens and accumulation of antimicrobial and other chemical residues. This study aimed to determine differences in occurrence and characteristics of Salmonella spp. isolated from tilapia-pig and non-integrated aquaculture systems in Guangdong province, China. A total of 77 samples (9 pig feed, 19 fish feed, 9 pig faeces, 20 fish mucus and 20 fish intestine) from 10 tilapia-pig ponds and 10 non-integrated ponds were analysed. Salmonella spp. was found in fish mucus (20.0%), fish intestine (40.0%) and pig faeces (11.1%) from integrated ponds, and from fish mucus (40.0%) and fish intestine (40.0%) from non-integrated ponds. S. Weltevreden (76.5%) was by far the most common serovar showing limited antimicrobial resistance. One pig faeces sample contained S. Typhimurium whereas feed samples were found free of Salmonella spp.. DNA fingerprinting by the PFGE method showed a clonal relationship of S. Weltevreden which was supported by similar antimicrobial resistance patterns (sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim resistance) as well as most isolates harbouring a 147-kb sized plasmid. The common finding of S. Weltevreden in both tilapia production systems indicates that this serovar may have a different ecology and increased survival in aquaculture environments in comparison with other Salmonella serovars. Further in vivo studies of the ecology of S. Weltevreden in aquaculture environments are needed.",
keywords = "Salmonella Weltevreden, Tilapia, Integrated aquaculture system, China",
author = "Kang Li and Gitte Petersen and Lisa Barco and Kristian Hvidtfeldt and Liping Liu and Anders Dalsgaard",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014",
language = "English",
volume = "65",
pages = "19--24",
journal = "Food Microbiology",
issn = "0740-0020",
publisher = "Academic Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Salmonella Weltevreden in integrated and non-integrated tilapia aquaculture systems in Guangdong, China

AU - Li, Kang

AU - Petersen, Gitte

AU - Barco, Lisa

AU - Hvidtfeldt, Kristian

AU - Liu, Liping

AU - Dalsgaard, Anders

PY - 2017/8

Y1 - 2017/8

N2 - Integrated tilapia-pig farming, which uses manure from pigs as fertilizers in fish pond, is a traditional and common production system practised by small-scale farmers in South-east Asia. Although such systems may be environmentally sustainable, they also pose potential food safety hazards including transmission of faecal zoonotic pathogens and accumulation of antimicrobial and other chemical residues. This study aimed to determine differences in occurrence and characteristics of Salmonella spp. isolated from tilapia-pig and non-integrated aquaculture systems in Guangdong province, China. A total of 77 samples (9 pig feed, 19 fish feed, 9 pig faeces, 20 fish mucus and 20 fish intestine) from 10 tilapia-pig ponds and 10 non-integrated ponds were analysed. Salmonella spp. was found in fish mucus (20.0%), fish intestine (40.0%) and pig faeces (11.1%) from integrated ponds, and from fish mucus (40.0%) and fish intestine (40.0%) from non-integrated ponds. S. Weltevreden (76.5%) was by far the most common serovar showing limited antimicrobial resistance. One pig faeces sample contained S. Typhimurium whereas feed samples were found free of Salmonella spp.. DNA fingerprinting by the PFGE method showed a clonal relationship of S. Weltevreden which was supported by similar antimicrobial resistance patterns (sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim resistance) as well as most isolates harbouring a 147-kb sized plasmid. The common finding of S. Weltevreden in both tilapia production systems indicates that this serovar may have a different ecology and increased survival in aquaculture environments in comparison with other Salmonella serovars. Further in vivo studies of the ecology of S. Weltevreden in aquaculture environments are needed.

AB - Integrated tilapia-pig farming, which uses manure from pigs as fertilizers in fish pond, is a traditional and common production system practised by small-scale farmers in South-east Asia. Although such systems may be environmentally sustainable, they also pose potential food safety hazards including transmission of faecal zoonotic pathogens and accumulation of antimicrobial and other chemical residues. This study aimed to determine differences in occurrence and characteristics of Salmonella spp. isolated from tilapia-pig and non-integrated aquaculture systems in Guangdong province, China. A total of 77 samples (9 pig feed, 19 fish feed, 9 pig faeces, 20 fish mucus and 20 fish intestine) from 10 tilapia-pig ponds and 10 non-integrated ponds were analysed. Salmonella spp. was found in fish mucus (20.0%), fish intestine (40.0%) and pig faeces (11.1%) from integrated ponds, and from fish mucus (40.0%) and fish intestine (40.0%) from non-integrated ponds. S. Weltevreden (76.5%) was by far the most common serovar showing limited antimicrobial resistance. One pig faeces sample contained S. Typhimurium whereas feed samples were found free of Salmonella spp.. DNA fingerprinting by the PFGE method showed a clonal relationship of S. Weltevreden which was supported by similar antimicrobial resistance patterns (sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim resistance) as well as most isolates harbouring a 147-kb sized plasmid. The common finding of S. Weltevreden in both tilapia production systems indicates that this serovar may have a different ecology and increased survival in aquaculture environments in comparison with other Salmonella serovars. Further in vivo studies of the ecology of S. Weltevreden in aquaculture environments are needed.

KW - Salmonella Weltevreden

KW - Tilapia

KW - Integrated aquaculture system

KW - China

U2 - 10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014

DO - 10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.014

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28400002

VL - 65

SP - 19

EP - 24

JO - Food Microbiology

JF - Food Microbiology

SN - 0740-0020

ER -

ID: 179528191