The Journal of Poultry Science (Oct 2014)

Sero-Epidemiological Survey of Egg-Transmitted Bacterial Diseases in Broiler Breeder Flocks in Korea

  • Jae-Keun Cho,
  • Jin-Hyun Kim,
  • Soon-Hyo Kwon,
  • Won Kim,
  • Choi-Kyu Park,
  • Ki-Seuk Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2141/jpsa.0130228
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 4
pp. 435 – 443

Abstract

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The purpose of this study was to investigate the immune status or infection rates for primary egg-transmitted bacterial diseases such as pullorum disease-fowl typhoid (PD-FT), Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) infection, and Mycoplasma synoviae (MS) infection among 70 broiler breeder flocks throughout Korea between July 2011 and August 2011. The sero-prevalence of flocks and individual chickens for PD-FT was 50.0% and 9.7%, respectively. The prevalence of PD-FT sero-positivity increased over time from rearing to advanced age period. The sero-positive rate of flocks and individual chickens for Salmonella Gallinarum 9R (SG 9R) was 95.7% and 83.6%, respectively. Only two flocks in the brooding period and one flock in the laying period out of all flocks tested were sero-negative for SG 9R. When evaluating MG infection rates, 63 flocks were sero-positive. This excluded two flocks in the brooding period, one flock in the rearing period, and four flocks in the laying period. The sero-prevalence of individual chickens was as high as 66.1% and 67.8% in the rearing and laying periods, respectively. Additionally, birds that were an advanced age period had a high sero-prevalence rate of 86.6%. The rates of sero-positivity for MS infection among flocks and individual chickens were 88.6% and 64.2%, respectively. Data from the present investigation confirmed that the sero-prevalence of PD-FT, MG infection, and MS infection among broiler breeder flocks in Korea is very high. Consequently, we recommend that a national intervention strategy should be established in the near future to eradicate these diseases from broiler breeder flocks.

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