EMPORIA, VA — Eighteen stores in Georgia have been linked to this week's recall of pre-cut melons, according to the Food and Drug Administration. One of the stores is Jekyll Market on Jekyll Island, while the other 17 stores are Sprout locations in the Atlanta metro, officials said as of Saturday. Other retail locations may be added to the list, according to the new update. (See the full list of stores below.)

Fruit salad mixes containing pre-cut melon have been connected to a multi-state outbreak of Salmonella that has sickened at least 60 people, officials said. These are the stores that reported the melons under recall were on their shelves:

Sprouts Farmers Market, 1845 Piedmont Ave. Atlanta

Sprouts Farmers Market, 530 Lakeland Plz., Cumming

Sprouts Farmers Market, 2551 Blackmon Drive, Decatur

Sprouts Farmers Market, 2220 Peachtree Industrial Blvd., Duluth

Sprouts Farmers Market, 2480 Mt. Vernon Road, Dunwoody

Sprouts Farmers Market, 1239 Oakleigh Drive East Point, Atlanta

Sprouts Farmers Market, 1250 Scenic Highway, Ste. 1704, Lawrenceville

Sprouts Farmers Market, 4101 Roswell Road, Marietta

Sprouts Farmers Market, 3805 Dallas Hwy. SW Ste 200, Marietta

Sprouts Farmers Market, 2015 E. Highway 54, Peachtree City

Sprouts Farmers Market, 5130 Peachtree Pkwy., Peachtree Corners

Sprouts Farmers Market, 10800 Alpharetta Hwy., Roswell

Sprouts Farmers Market, 4600 Roswell Rd. #A100, Sandy Springs

Sprouts Farmers Market, 4330 East-West Conn., Smyrna

Sprouts Farmers Market, 3630 Peachtree Pkwy., Suwanee

Sprouts Farmers Market, 4310 Lavista Road, Suite A200, Tucker

Sprouts Farmers Market, 1430 Towne Lake Parkway, Woodstock Consumers should not eat the following items sold in clear plastic clamshell containers from locations included in the recall, according to the Food and Drug Administration: Fresh cut watermelon

Honeydew melon

Cantaloupe

Fresh-cut fruit medleys that contain watermelon, honeydew or cantaloupe Eating products contaminated with Salmonella can cause fever, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. While most infections last 4 to 7 days and do not require treatment, some people get diarrhea so severe that they need to be hospitalized.

So far, 31 people have been hospitalized from with the pre-cut melon recall, according to the Food and Drug Administration reported. Nobody has died. Salmonella can be fatal for young children, older adults and those whose immune systems are weakened.

People who have symptoms of Salmonella infection should contact their health care provider.

There have been 60 people sickened in five states, all located in the Midwest, as of Friday, according to federal health officials; no illnesses have been reported in Georgia.

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