Bacterial microbiota of the Pantanal caiman eggs incubated in nature PulcherioR. MaruyamaF.H. Dorado-RodriguesT. SilveiraM. DutraV. FerrazR. 2018 <p></p><p>ABSTRACT The Pantanal caiman productive chain has grown in Mato Grosso with the exportation of 143.383 leather pieces in 2015, whose management system (ranching) implies the artificial incubation of eggs. In this process, the bacterial contamination of the eggs influences the hatching rate. Knowledge of the naturally incubated microbiota of eggs guides the appropriate sanitary management in the incubator room. Here we present information about this microbiota and correlate it with that of other crocodilians, indicating the species with pathogenic potential. Samples were collected in 20 nests at Pantanal, and sown in blood and Mac Conckey agar. Salmonella sp. was confirmed through polymerase chain reaction technique. From the twenty-two different species of bacteria isolated, 59% are from the Enterobacteriaceae Family and 41% from other bacterial taxonomies. The similarity of findings to isolated bacteria in the crocodilians oral and/or intestinal/cloacal microbiota was of 77,27%. The most and least frequent bacteria were, respectively, Bacillus cereus, Flavobacterium multivorum and Citrobacter freundii and Escherichia hermannii, Hafnia alvei, Morganella, morganni, Salmonella sp., Serratia marcescens and Shigella sonnei. Among the isolated bacteria, 86,36% are pathogenic for crocodilians. The maternal and environmental origin of the microbiota of eggs naturally incubated is, respectively, of 77,27% and 27,27%.</p><p></p>