Source Attribution of Salmonella in Macadamia Nuts to Animal and Environmental Reservoirs in Queensland, Australia
Date
2019
Authors
Munck, Nanna
Smith, James J
Bates, John
Glass, Kathryn
Hald, Tine
Kirk, Martyn
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
Abstract
Salmonella enterica is a common contaminant of macadamia nut kernels in the subtropical state of Queensland
(QLD), Australia. We hypothesized that nonhuman sources in the plantation environment contaminate macadamia nuts. We applied a modified Hald source attribution model to attribute Salmonella serovars and phage
types detected on macadamia nuts from 1998 to 2017 to specific animal and environmental sources. Potential
sources were represented by Salmonella types isolated from avian, companion animal, biosolids-soil-compost,
equine, porcine, poultry, reptile, ruminant, and wildlife samples by the QLD Health reference laboratory. Two
attribution models were applied: model 1 merged data across 1998–2017, whereas model 2 pooled data into
5-year time intervals. Model 1 attributed 47% (credible interval, CrI: 33.6–60.8) of all Salmonella detections on
macadamia nuts to biosolids-soil-compost. Wildlife and companion animals were found to be the second and
third most important contamination sources, respectively. Results from model 2 showed that the importance of
the different sources varied between the different time periods; for example, Salmonella contamination from
biosolids-soil-compost varied from 4.4% (CrI: 0.2–11.7) in 1998–2002 to 19.3% (CrI: 4.6–39.4) in 2003–2007,
and the proportion attributed to poultry varied from 4.8% (CrI: 1–11) in 2008–2012 to 24% (CrI: 11.3–40.7) in
2013–2017. Findings suggest that macadamia nuts were contaminated by direct transmission from animals with
access to the plantations (e.g., wildlife and companion animals) or from indirect transmission from animal
reservoirs through biosolids-soil-compost. The findings from this study can be used to guide environmental and
wildlife sampling and analysis to further investigate routes of Salmonella contamination of macadamia nuts
and propose control options to reduce potential risk of human salmonellosis.
Description
Keywords
source attribution, Salmonella, macadamia nuts, Australia, modeling, environmental transmission
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Source
Foodborne Pathogens and Disease
Type
Journal article
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License
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