Abstract
Typing of Mycobacterium avium strains obtained in a study of endemic tuberculosis in a Wildfowl Reserve permitted the recognition of two separate infected groups. The main infection was in Anatidae and was due to M. avium, type 1; the other was in chickens used for incubation and brooding and the predominance in it of type 2 agreed with normal experience of birds, pigs and cattle in Britain. Many of the strains isolated from the Anatidae were aberrant and methods used to investigate these are described; two of the strains may belong to a new type. Birds which died from other causes, usually trauma, often had subclinical tuberculosis and 5% of the samples of mud and soil examined yielded M. avium. © 1973, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Schaefer, W. B., Beer, J. V., Wood, N. A., Boughton, E., Jenkins, P. A., & Marks, J. (1973). A bacteriological study of endemic tuberculosis in birds. Journal of Hygiene, 71(3), 549–557. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022172400046532
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