Salmonellosis is a bacterial infection of man and animals causing enteritis, abortion, and septicaemia.
Salmonella organisms may be carried by animals without any signs of illness, and are shed in faeces. Shedding rates may increase if carrier animals are stressed or if clinical infection develops. Organisms may also be spread by flies, rodents and birds. Animals are mostly infected by ingestion of organisms, although inhalation or conjunctival contamination may also result in infection.
The response of an animal to Salmonella challenge will depend on multiple factors including number of bacteria and virulence, specific immunity to Salmonella from vaccination or prior exposure to that strain, and a wide range of factors influencing general health (immune capacity, concurrent disease, nutritional state, and stress).
Within individually exposed animals, the outcome may range from resistance (no disease at all), to mild disease, to severe infection and possibly death. The export process is associated with a range of stressors (feed/water deprivation, change in environment and feed, transport, mixing of animals, exposure to other diseases, and climatic stress) that may increase the level of Salmonella shedding and make animals more susceptible to infection.
Cattle are at risk of exposure in assembly points, particularly if assembly points are continually populated with animals over time. Outbreaks of clinical disease may occur during assembly or at sea under favourable conditions (high density of stressed or susceptible animals and heavy exposure).
There is particular interest in salmonellosis in sheep in the export process because inanition and salmonellosis are the two most common causes of death in sheep exported from Australia to other countries.
The epidemiology of salmonellosis in export sheep is complex. A causal web for salmonellosis and inanition is shown in the section on Inappetence/inanition. Inappetence is recognised as a potential precursor that may predispose sheep to salmonellosis, but sheep may also develop salmonellosis without having inappetence. Salmonella are ubiquitous and many healthy animals will carry and shed organisms without disease. Many factors interact to influence the occurrence of disease, including Salmonella challenge (number of bacteria and virulence of a strain), specific immunity to Salmonella infection, as well as general health and immune capacity (influenced by innate immune response capacity, concurrent disease, nutrition, and stress).
The prevalence of sheep shedding Salmonella on entry to export assembly depots has been shown to be very low. Clinically infected animals and passive shedders are thought to be the major potential sources of Salmonella organisms for other susceptible animals, either directly, or indirectly through contamination of water, feed and the environment. Salmonella organisms can survive for months to years in the environment, and under favourable environmental conditions, Salmonella are capable of proliferation in the environment to increase the level of environmental contamination. Assembly feedlots that receive large numbers of sheep over many months for consecutive export voyages may become heavily contaminated with Salmonella organisms over time, leading to increased risk of exposure of new arrivals to infection.
Factors that are likely to be associated with increased risk of heavy shedding in sheep include mixing of animals in saleyards or dealer operations, frequent or prolonged transport movements, reduced feed access, inappetence, or other stressors.
Healthy sheep may be reasonably resistant to Salmonella exposure. Stressors such as transport, yarding, feed and water curfews or deprivation, inappetence, concurrent disease, and inclement weather can all reduce host resistance and increase the risk of salmonellosis. The outcome in individual infected animals may range from recovery, to acute, fulminant bacteraemia, endotoxaemia and death.
Compromised animals exposed to heavy levels of virulent organisms may develop acute disease and begin dying while still in the assembly feedlot. In other cases, animals may be exposed in the feedlot and develop disease during the early part of the voyage. In exposed and infected animals, the disease usually runs its course over 14-21 days.
Enteritis (mainly associated with salmonellosis), inanition, and the combination of both enteritis and inanition together, form the most common causes of mortality during export voyages (LIVE.0123, 2009).