Artigo Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Enteric viruses in water samples from Brazilian dairy farms

2012; Elsevier BV; Volume: 111; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.agwat.2012.05.001

ISSN

1873-2283

Autores

Lucas Kessler de Oliveira, Juliane Deise Fleck, Juliana Comerlato, Mariana Kluge, Bianca Bergamaschi, Rafael Bandeira Fabres, Roger Bordin da Luz, Joseane Vanessa dos Santos da Silva, Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues, Joselaine Lino Genro, Rodrigo Staggemeier, Nelson Antônio Baldasso, Fernando Rosado Spilki,

Tópico(s)

Virus-based gene therapy research

Resumo

The contamination of water by adenoviruses (AdV), rotaviruses (genogroup A, GARV), and enteroviruses (EV), including bovine enterovirus (BEV), was assessed for the first time in Brazilian dairy farms. The area of study, at the municipality of Taquara, is highly representative of the dairy farms in Southern Brazil: the farms are small, high animal densities per grazing area are used, the management of manure is poor and the sanitation for the human excreta is also deficient. Conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was practiced to detect AdV, GARV, EV, and BEV in water samples taken from 27 collection sites in 10 dairy farms; two collections were made, after wet and dry weather conditions. For the first collection of water samples, during wet conditions posed by 18 consecutive days of rain prior to the sampling, 6 (22.2%) samples gave positive results for AdV and only 1 sample was positive for GARV. On the other hand, during the second collection, made under dry conditions, 4 (16%) of the samples were positive for AdV, whereas 10 (40%) samples gave positive results for GARV. EV was found on lower rates (9.6%) of the samples and BEV was not detected. Fecal contamination of water bodies is widespread on these farms, which could be confirmed either by detection of fecal coliforms and enteric viruses found.

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