Repository logoRepository logoRepository logoRepository logo
Repository logoRepository logoRepository logoRepository logo
  • Communities & Collections
  • Research Outputs
  • Employees
  • AAAHigh contrastHigh contrast
    EN PL
    • Log In
      Have you forgotten your password?
AAAHigh contrastHigh contrast
EN PL
  • Log In
    Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Bibliografia UPP
  3. Bibliografia UPP
  4. Bacteriota and Antibiotic Resistance in Spiders
 
Full item page
Options

Bacteriota and Antibiotic Resistance in Spiders

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Kačániová, Miroslava
Terentjeva, Margarita
Kowalczewski, Przemysław Łukasz 
Babošová, Mária
Porhajašová, Jana Ivanič
Hikal, Wafaa M.
Fedoriak, Mariia
Faculty
Wydział Nauk o Żywności i Żywieniu
Journal
Insects
ISSN
2075-4450
DOI
10.3390/insects13080680
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/13/8/680
Volume
13
Number
8
Pages from-to
art. 680
Abstract (EN)
Arthropods are reported to serve as vectors of transmission of pathogenic microorganisms to humans, animals, and the environment. The aims of our study were (i) to identify the external bacteriota of spiders inhabiting a chicken farm and slaughterhouse and (ii) to detect antimicrobial resistance of the isolates. In total, 102 spiders of 14 species were collected from a chicken farm, slaughterhouse, and buildings located in west Slovakia in 2017. Samples were diluted in peptone buffered water, and Tryptone Soya Agar (TSA), Triple Sugar Agar (TSI), Blood Agar (BA), and Anaerobic Agar (AA) were used for inoculation. A total of 28 genera and 56 microbial species were isolated from the samples. The most abundant species were Bacillus pumilus (28 isolates) and B. thuringensis (28 isolates). The least isolated species were Rhodotorula mucilaginosa (one isolate), Kocuria rhizophila (two isolates), Paenibacillus polymyxa (two isolates), and Staphylococcus equorum (two isolates). There were differences in microbial composition between the samples originating from the slaughterhouse, chicken farm, and buildings. The majority of the bacterial isolates resistant to antibiotics were isolated from the chicken farm. The isolation of potentially pathogenic bacteria such as Salmonella, Escherichia, and Salmonella spp., which possess multiple drug resistance, is of public health concern.
Keywords (EN)
  • spiders

  • exogenes microbiota

  • mass spectrometry

  • antibiotic resistance

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
July 27, 2022
Fundusze Europejskie
  • About repository
  • Contact
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies

Copyright 2025 Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu

DSpace Software provided by PCG Academia