“…Since these first detections, enteritis in turkey has been increasingly associated with the presence of astroviruses (Cattoli et al, 2007;Pantin-Jackwood et al, 2007, 2008aDa Silva et al, 2008;Jindal et al, 2010a), although high astrovirus prevalence has also been reported in apparently healthy turkey flocks (PantinJackwood et al, 2007(PantinJackwood et al, , 2008aJindal et al, 2010b;Domanska-Blicharz et al, 2011). TAstV2 appears to be the most common among the identified turkey astroviruses, while TAstV1 and avian nephritis virus* an astrovirus first described as responsible for nephritis in chicken (Imada et al, 2000)*have only been detected sporadically in turkey flocks (Pantin-Jackwood et al, 2007, 2008aDomanska-Blicharz et al, 2011). In field surveys, astrovirus is a very common finding in commercial turkey farms with prevalence ranging from 84 to 100% (Pantin-Jackwood et al, 2007, 2008aJindal et al, 2010b) and from 41 to 44% (Villarreal et al, 2006;Domanska-Blicharz et al, 2011).…”