49 research outputs found

    How Visitors and Locals at a Sport Event Differ in Motives and Identity

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    Although the literature on events differentiates between locals, casual attendees, and those who have travelled specifically to attend the event, little is known about how the types of attendee differ. This study compared the fan motivation, leisure motivation, and identification with the subculture of athletics reported by a sample (N = 777) of attendees at the 2005 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships. Age, gender, and income were also included. Regression analyses were used to determine the structure of relations among the variables, and to ascertain whether the levels of motivation or identity varied among the three types of attendee. Tests for linear restrictions were used to determine whether the structure of relations among the variables differed by type of attendee. The structure of relations among the variables did not differ among the three types of attendee, but attendees who had travelled specifically to attend the event reported substantially higher identification with the subculture of athletics, and slightly higher fan motivation. Identification with the subculture of athletics mediated much of the effect. Females reported higher fan motivation and higher leisure motivation than did males. Age had a small but significant relationship with fan motivation, and income had a small but significant relationship with leisure motivation. Findings are generally consistent with predictions derived from theories of motivation, subculture, and gender roles. It is suggested that marketing communications directed out-of-town should highlight opportunities to strengthen, parade, and celebrate, while those in the local trading radius should underscore the entertainment, aesthetics, and vicarious achievement featured at the event

    Avian Colibacillosis and Salmonellosis: A Closer Look at Epidemiology, Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, Control and Public Health Concerns

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    Avian colibacillosis and salmonellosis are considered to be the major bacterial diseases in the poultry industry world-wide. Colibacillosis and salmonellosis are the most common avian diseases that are communicable to humans. This article provides the vital information on the epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, control and public health concerns of avian colibacillosis and salmonellosis. A better understanding of the information addressed in this review article will assist the poultry researchers and the poultry industry in continuing to make progress in reducing and eliminating avian colibacillosis and salmonellosis from the poultry flocks, thereby reducing potential hazards to the public health posed by these bacterial diseases

    Effects of Orally Administered Tetracycline on the Intestinal Community Structure of Chickens and on tet Determinant Carriage by Commensal Bacteria and Campylobacter jejuni

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    There is a growing concern that antibiotic usage in animal production has selected for resistant food-borne bacteria. Since tetracyclines are common therapeutic antibiotics used in poultry production, we sought to evaluate the effects of oral administration on the resistance of poultry commensal bacteria and the intestinal bacterial community structure. The diversity indices calculated from terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis of 16S rRNA amplicons did not indicate significant changes in the cecal bacterial community in response to oxytetracycline. To evaluate its effects on cultivable commensals, Enterococcus spp., Escherichia coli, and Campylobacter spp. were isolated from the cecal droppings of broiler chickens. Enterococcus spp. and E. coli expressed tetracycline MICs of >8 ÎĽg/ml and harbored a variety of tet resistance determinants regardless of the tetracycline exposure history of the birds. The enterococcal isolates possessed tetM (61%), tetL (25.4%), and tetK (1.3%), as well as tetO (52.5%), the determinant known to confer a tetracycline resistance phenotype in Campylobacter jejuni. E. coli isolates harbored tetA (32.2%) or tetB (30.5%). Tetracycline MICs remained at <2 ÎĽg/ml for Campylobacter isolates before and after tetracycline treatment of the chickens, even though isolates expressing MICs of >16 ÎĽg/ml were commonly cultured from flocks that did not receive oxytetracycline. The results imply that complex ecological and genetic factors contribute to the prevalence of antibiotic resistance arising from resistance gene transfer in the production environment

    Research Note: First report on the detection of necrotic enteritis (NE) B-like toxin in biological samples from NE-afflicted chickens using capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

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    ABSTRACT: Necrotic enteritis (NE) is a devastating enteric disease caused by Clostridium perfringens type G. One of the pore-forming toxins, NE B-like (NetB) toxin, secreted by pathogenic C. perfringens type G, has been proposed to be the main virulent factor in NE pathogenesis. The present study aimed to detect the presence of NetB toxin in biological samples of NE-afflicted chickens using NetB-specific monoclonal-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Biological samples, including serum, digesta, and fecal droppings, were obtained from three previous NE studies (designated as Trials 1 to 3). In Trials 1 and 2, broiler chicks were infected with Eimeria maxima strain 41A on day 1 and followed by the netB-positive C. perfringens on day 18. Serum samples were obtained at 20 d post-hatch (i.e., 2 d post C. perfringens infection). In addition, various samples, including serum, gut digesta, and fecal droppings, that had been collected 0, 6, 24, and 30 h post C. perfringens infection were obtained. In Trial 3, broiler chicks were indirectly infected with litter-contaminated E. maxima on d 14 and followed by netB-positive C. perfringens via drinking water on days 18, 19, and 20. Serum samples and fecal droppings were obtained 21 d post-hatch (i.e., 1 d post last C. perfringens infection). The results showed that NetB toxin was not detected in serum samples in Trials 1 and 3. No NetB toxin was detected in all samples obtained before C. perfringens infection in Trial 2. Low but detectable amounts of NetB toxin were found in the serum samples obtained 6 h post C. perfringens infection in Trial 2. While NetB toxin in digesta and fecal droppings was detected 6 h post C. perfringens infection, its level plateaued 24 and 30 h post C. perfringens infection. In Trial 3, NetB toxin was detected in fecal droppings from the NE group, and its concentration ranged from 2.9 to 3.1 ng/g of wet feces. In Trial 2, NE-specific lesions were not seen 0 and 6 h post C. perfringens infection but exhibited lesions were moderate to severe 24 h post infection, leading to a moderate association (r = +0.527) between NE lesions and NetB toxin in the gut digesta. This is the first study to use NetB-specific monoclonal-based capture ELISA to determine and report the presence of native NetB toxin in biological samples from NE-induced chickens
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