Distribution and characterization of Salmonella enterica isolates from irrigation ponds in the southeastern United States

Z Luo, G Gu, A Ginn, MC Giurcanu… - Applied and …, 2015 - Am Soc Microbiol
Z Luo, G Gu, A Ginn, MC Giurcanu, P Adams, G Vellidis, AHC van Bruggen, MD Danyluk
Applied and environmental microbiology, 2015Am Soc Microbiol
Irrigation water has been implicated as a likely source of produce contamination by
Salmonella enterica. Therefore, the distribution of S. enterica was surveyed monthly in
irrigation ponds (n= 10) located within a prime agricultural region in southern Georgia and
northern Florida. All ponds and 28.2% of all samples (n= 635) were positive for Salmonella,
with an overall geometric mean concentration (0.26 most probable number [MPN]/liter) that
was relatively low compared to prior reports for rivers in this region. Salmonella peaks were …
Abstract
Irrigation water has been implicated as a likely source of produce contamination by Salmonella enterica. Therefore, the distribution of S. enterica was surveyed monthly in irrigation ponds (n = 10) located within a prime agricultural region in southern Georgia and northern Florida. All ponds and 28.2% of all samples (n = 635) were positive for Salmonella, with an overall geometric mean concentration (0.26 most probable number [MPN]/liter) that was relatively low compared to prior reports for rivers in this region. Salmonella peaks were seasonal; the levels correlated with increased temperature and rainfall (P < 0.05). The numbers and occurrence were significantly higher in water (0.32 MPN/liter and 37% of samples) than in sediment (0.22 MPN/liter and 17% of samples) but did not vary with depth. Representative isolates (n = 185) from different ponds, sample types, and seasons were examined for resistance to 15 different antibiotics; most strains were resistant to streptomycin (98.9%), while 20% were multidrug resistant (MDR) for 2 to 6 antibiotics. DiversiLab repetitive extragenic palindromic-element sequence-based PCR (rep-PCR) revealed genetic diversity and showed 43 genotypes among 191 isolates, as defined by >95% similarity. The genotypes did not partition by pond, season, or sample type. Genetic similarity to known serotypes indicated Hadar, Montevideo, and Newport as the most prevalent. All ponds achieved the current safety standards for generic Escherichia coli in agricultural water, and regression modeling showed that the E. coli level was a significant predictor for the probability of Salmonella occurrence. However, persistent populations of Salmonella were widely distributed in irrigation ponds, and the associated risks for produce contamination and subsequent human exposure are unknown, supporting continued surveillance of this pathogen in agricultural settings.
American Society for Microbiology
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