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Seagulls Spreading Resistant Bacteria On Beaches

bs0d3 writes "Dr. Patrice Nordmann has disclosed the results of a small study that looked for resistant bacteria in seagull poop landing on Miami Beach in Florida. During April 2010, they collected 52 stool samples and found within them 83 isolates of gut bacteria such as E. coli. Wired's Maryn McKenna writes, 'Seven of the E. coli carried genes that direct production of CTX-M enzymes, a troublesome resistance factor that protects bacteria from the very broad category of drugs called extended-spectrum beta-lactams and that has recently spread worldwide. In addition, 14 of the E. coli were also carrying the gene for the CMY-2 enzyme, which confers the same ESBL resistance on Salmonella. Nine of the isolates were multi-drug resistant.' This has led some scientists to the conclusion that this is one avenue these bacterias are taking in human infections worldwide. The resistance factors identified in the seagull feces match ones that cause highly resistant infections in humans, and correlate with data collected on beaches in Portugal, Sweden, and France."

1 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Landfills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Open-air landfills, leftovers, old prescriptions, and seagulls. Yep.

    With the exception of earthquakes and meteor strikes, all problems can be traced to human overpopulation.

    Your misanthropy is astounding. Why do you separate humanity from nature, and in such a negative manner? Human actions are no more nor no less unnatural than a meteor strike.

    If humanity is truly such a negative, one less person would make the entire universe a better place. So why the hell haven't you offed yourself yet?

    Oh? You're an unthinking hyprocrite spouting misanthropic garbage that you think sounds profound but is really about as deep as a parking lot puddle?