“…However, levels of colistin resistance are consistently low. The gene mcr-1 has also been identified in bacteria from sheep (Tang et al, 2019), poultry (ducks, geese, and pigeons) (Zhang et al, 2018;Zhuge et al, 2019), companion animals (dogs and cats) (Sun et al, 2016;Zhang et al, 2016;Lei et al, 2017;Wang et al, 2018a;Ortega-Paredes et al, 2019;Rumi et al, 2019), and even wild animals (Liakopoulos et al, 2016;Mohsin et al, 2016;Ruzauskas and Vaskeviciute, 2016;Unger et al, 2017;Bachiri et al, 2018;Oteo et al, 2018) (Table 1 and Supporting Information Table S1). The first report of a wild animal carrying mcr-1 gene could be traced back to 2012, when Liakopoulos et al identified five mcr-1-positive E. coli from Larus dominicanus (n = 50) in Argentina, and all mcr-1 genes were located on IncI2 plasmids (Liakopoulos et al, 2016).…”