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Contents
Science Update
Older Hens: Fasting, Eggs, and Salmonella
ARS scientists in Georgia, in a series of studies, found new clues for
coping with two problems in the egg industry: egg contamination with
Salmonella and low egg production by older hens. In one study,
scientists found these birds' natural resistance to Salmonella infection
plummets after they are put on a fast for a week or so. Fasting, a common
industry practice, causes the hens to molt. This triggers hormonal and other
changes, soon restoring up to 90 percent of a hen's previous egg-laying
capacity. In tests, fasted chickens became infected with Salmonella
after ingesting as few as 10 bacterial cells. Typically, a chicken that is not
being fasted becomes infectedthrough what's called the oral-fecal
routeonly after ingesting 10,000 or more Salmonella cells shed by
an infected bird. The increased susceptibility of fasted hens leaves them more
vulnerable to contracting the infection by a less common routethrough the
air. Plus, fasted hens' increased susceptibility to infection raises the odds
of egg contamination. On average, the odds are lowless than 3 in 10,000.
But they could be lowered further with an effective alternative to fasting. One
method with potential is an experimental low-calcium diet developed at the
University of Georgia. Joint studies by the university and ARS found that birds
molted with this diet instead of by fasting were 100 times less susceptible to
infection.
Peter
Holt, USDA-ARS Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory, Athens, Georgia,
phone (706) 546-3442
International Germplasm Could Help Lay Down a Bunt
ARS scientists confirmed that wheats from India and Mexico hold genetic
resistance to Karnal bunt, a fungal disease that threatens U.S. wheat exports.
The resistant germplasm was selected from 40,000 lines from collections at
Punjab Agricultural University in India and CIMMYT (International Maize and
Wheat Improvement Center) in Mexico. In lab tests, scientists found resistant
germplasm from Mexico that also resisted Asian forms of Tilletia indica
fungi. And vice versa: they identified resistant Indian lines that ward off
Mexican strains of the fungus. By incorporating such resistant lines in
breeding programs,
U.S. breeders might better protect the American crop from future
out-breakssuch as the one that began in durum wheat last March in
Arizona. Countries that don't have the fungus won't buy wheat from countries
that do, so keeping the disease out of American wheat is a top priority.
Morris
Bonde and
Gary
Peterson, USDA ARS Foreign Disease/Weed Science Research Laboratory,
Frederick, Maryland, phone (301) 619-2343
Interleukin-4 for Deworming?
Nature lends a hand to help animals rid themselves of gastrointestinal
worms. This finding by ARS scientists could lead to a new way to treat
parasite-infected people as well as animals. Worm infection stimulates an
animal's immune cells to make a natural substance, interleukin-4. IL-4 starts
the worm-expulsion process, though all the mechanics aren't yet known. In lab
tests, researchers injected IL-4 into healthy, uninfected mice. The animals'
intestinal muscles began to contract more often and to secrete more fluids.
Together, these responses could dislodge worms from the intestine. This
discovery could lead to using synthetic copies of IL-4 to treat the infections.
Joseph F.
Urban, Jr., USDA-ARS Immunology and Disease Resistance Laboratory,
Beltsville, Maryland, phone (301) 504-5528 ext. 267
Probing Irrigation Needs
Automated irrigation for cotton and other field crops is the objective of a
cooperative research and development agreement between ARS and Dynamax, Inc.,
of Houston, Texas. ARS researchers designed a system that turns on water pumps
when there's no longer enough water in the soil for plant roots to use. An
electronic pulse travels by cable to stainless steel probes in the soil at
various depths to several feet. Soil water is computed by how long a pulse
takes to pass through the probe. Dynamax is manufacturing the system and will
develop it further with help from ARS and Texas A&M University. The
system's cost may be offset by labor savings and lower expenses from pumping
only when water is needed.
Steve
Evett, USDA ARS Soil and Water Management Research Unit, Bushland, Texas,
phone (806) 356-5775
"Science Update" was published in the
November 1996
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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