Chicken and turkeys but it can be seen in other birds, however S. gallinarum is host specific.
Widely distributed, however it is not present in the Pacific Region.
In young chicks there is a per acute infection with sudden death, or and acute infection :
In birds older than three weeks:
Tissue and feces samples can be submitted for bacteria identification through culture or genetic techniques.
Serological tests are satisfactory for establishing the presence and estimating the prevalence of infection within a flock.
From infected birds, their faeces and their eggs. Ingestion of contaminated food, water or bedding, and contact transmission; also mechanical spread by humans, wild birds, mammals, flies, and on trucks, feed sacks etc.
May occur in newly-hatched birds due to trans-ovarial transmission.
Fowl typhoid could be introduced by importation of live infected chicken, hatching eggs. The bacteria can also be found in poultry meat but contamination of poultry flocks through this route is at low risk.
Live and inactivated vaccines are available for fowl typhoid in some countries.
If introduced control should focus on eradication of the disease through isolation and destruction of contaminated flocks, proper disposal of carcasses and disinfection of fomites.