• Aquatic bird farms may act as 'hotspots' for the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance. • mcr-1 may coexist with diverse antimicrobial resistance genes and virulence factors in Escherichia coli from aquatic birds. • Wide spread of mcr-1 on specific genetic backbones was shown in the different aquatic bird farms and a global data set. • This highlights the transferability of mcr-1 and its potential threat to public health. Due to their unique breeding pattern, aquatic bird farms are increasingly considered as hotspots in the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance. However, comprehensive studies addressing the whole-genomic features of colistin-resistant bacteria in aquatic bird farms are scarce. Over a 2-year period, we conducted surveillance to determine the whole-genome epidemiology and characterisation of mcr-1 -positive Escherichia coli in aquatic bird farms in southeastern coastal China. A total of 100 mcr-1 -producing isolates among 654 E. coli strains were recovered from 781 samples collected in 11 aquatic bird farms and 1 veterinary clinic in the Pearl River Delta area. Higher resistance phenotypes to 17 antibiotics were found in mcr-1 -positive isolates compared with other isolates. Subsequently, 20 mcr-1 -carrying isolates were sequenced to analyse the whole-genomic features. Molecular typing as well as antimicrobial resistance gene and virulence factor profiles of the isolates showed considerable diversity. Three types of genetic backbones of mcr-1 in the isolates were assembled and were identified in diverse broad-host-range plasmids and bacterial species. Pangenome analyses revealed a large genetic pool composed of the isolates. Furthermore, phylogenetic trees both of the isolates in this study and a global data set were built, indicating the spread of the three mcr-1 backbones and the mcr-1 -positive isolates among different habitats, farms and even countries. This study highlights that aquatic bird farms may act as an important reservoir for mcr - 1 -producing E. coli , from which colistin resistance may be spread to diverse habitats, different geographical locations and even across bacterial species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]