Matthew R. McLennanHirotake MoriAongart MahittikornRapeepun PrasertbunKatsuro HagiwaraMichael A. HuffmanRakuno Gakuen UniversityOxford Brookes UniversityMahidol UniversityKyoto UniversityBulindi Chimpanzee & Community Project2019-08-232019-08-232018-03-01EcoHealth. Vol.15, No.1 (2018), 143-14716129210161292022-s2.0-85035774906https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/45892© 2017, EcoHealth Alliance. Infectious diseases including those acquired through direct or indirect contact with people and livestock threaten the survival of wild great apes. Few studies have reported enterobacterial pathogens in chimpanzees. We used multiplex PCR to screen faeces of chimpanzees sharing a landscape with villagers and livestock in Bulindi, Uganda for Salmonella spp., enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (E. coli) and Shigella spp./enteroinvasive E. coli. All three potentially zoonotic pathogens were detected. Individual prevalence ranged between 7 and 20%, with most infections observed in mature male chimpanzees. These preliminary findings suggest detailed investigation of enterobacterial infections in people, primates and livestock in this ecosystem is warranted.Mahidol UniversityEnvironmental ScienceZoonotic Enterobacterial Pathogens Detected in Wild ChimpanzeesArticleSCOPUS10.1007/s10393-017-1303-4