Monitoring chicken flock behaviour provides early warning of infection by human pathogen Campylobacter
Colles FM., Cain RJ., Nickson T., Smith AL., Roberts SJ., Maiden MCJ., Lunn D., Dawkins MS.
<jats:p> <jats:italic>Campylobacter</jats:italic> is the commonest bacterial cause of gastrointestinal infection in humans, and chicken meat is the major source of infection throughout the world. Strict and expensive on-farm biosecurity measures have been largely unsuccessful in controlling infection and are hampered by the time needed to analyse faecal samples, with the result that <jats:italic>Campylobacter</jats:italic> status is often known only after a flock has been processed. Our data demonstrate an alternative approach that monitors the behaviour of live chickens with cameras and analyses the ‘optical flow’ patterns made by flock movements. <jats:italic>Campylobacter</jats:italic> -free chicken flocks have higher mean and lower kurtosis of optical flow than those testing positive for <jats:italic>Campylobacter</jats:italic> by microbiological methods. We show that by monitoring behaviour in this way, flocks likely to become positive can be identified within the first 7–10 days of life, much earlier than conventional on-farm microbiological methods. This early warning has the potential to lead to a more targeted approach to <jats:italic>Campylobacter</jats:italic> control and also provides new insights into possible sources of infection that could transform the control of this globally important food-borne pathogen. </jats:p>