Ducks and salmonella

In my obsessive watching of cooking shows, one thing I’ve noticed frequently is that cooks will often cook their ducks to rare/medium-rare. Not just a case of it looking rare because of the fact that duck meat is darker than chicken, but they’ll specifically say that they’re cooking it to medium-rare, or whatever.

I also remember seeing an episode of Good Eats where Alton Brown claimed that salmonella poisoning in ducks isn’t an issue because the hot wax procedure that is used to remove the feathers effectively kills any of the salmonella bacteria. This seems a little odd to me though. Not that I am one to ever question my personal idol, but for some reason it just doesn’t make sense to me.

So does anyone have the Straight Dope? Do ducks carry the same risk as chicken as far as salmonella goes? Or can duck meat be safely cooked to medium rare?

(I ask this question as I have a duck in the oven that I’ve already decided to thoroughly cook, just to be safe. Would be nice to know for future reference though.)

While noting that paraffin is indeed used to remove the pinfeathers, the Feds still note that

And they also list “duck” as one of the “raw or undercooked” foods that can carry salmonella.
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/hret3-a3.html

So.

Well you would say that :slight_smile:
Any info on the relitive danger level of various game birds?