Search results for "helminths"

showing 10 items of 202 documents

Helminth communities of owls (strigiformes) indicate strong biological and ecological differences from birds of prey (accipitriformes and falconiform…

2012

We compared the helminth communities of 5 owl species from Calabria (Italy) and evaluated the effect of phylogenetic and ecological factors on community structure. Two host taxonomic scales were considered, i.e., owl species, and owls vs. birds of prey. The latter scale was dealt with by comparing the data here obtained with that of birds of prey from the same locality and with those published previously on owls and birds of prey from Galicia (Spain). A total of 19 helminth taxa were found in owls from Calabria. Statistical comparison showed only marginal differences between scops owls (Otus scops) and little owls (Athene noctua) and tawny owls (Strix aluco). It would indicate that all owl …

Range (biology)ScienceVeterinary MicrobiologyZoologyOtus scopsBiologyGeneralist and specialist speciesMicrobiologyPredationbiology.animalHelminthsAnimalsCommunity AssemblyBiologyCommunity StructureFalconiformesPhylogenyMultidisciplinaryEcologyEcologyBird DiseasesQRSpecies diversitybiology.organism_classificationStrigiformesVeterinary ParasitologyStrix alucoStrigiformesItalyCommunity EcologyVeterinary DiseasesAccipitriformesMedicineParasitologyVeterinary ScienceHelminthiasis AnimalZoologyResearch ArticleHelminthologyPLoS ONE
researchProduct

Risk Analysis of Human Anisakidosis Through the Consumption of the Blue Whiting, Micromesistius poutassou, Sold at Spanish Supermarkets

2012

European legislation directed at the catering industry concerning the prevention of anisakidosis proposes efficient measures to avoid human infestation, but this legislation does not directly address the consumer at the household level. Assessing the anisakidosis risk for consumers who buy fresh fish at supermarkets in Spain, 284 blue whiting, Micromesistius poutassou, specimens, originating from two fishing zones and seasons of capture, sold at five nationwide Spanish supermarket chains, were examined to identify the presence of anisakid species and analyze their prevalence and abundance in viscera and flesh. The potential influence of intrinsic (length and weight) and extrinsic (origin, s…

Risk analysisFishingMicromesistiusFood ContaminationAnisakiasismedicine.disease_causeRisk AssessmentApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyFish DiseasesFood ParasitologyInfestationPrevalencemedicineAnimalsHumansHelminthsConsumption (economics)biologyFleshbiology.organism_classificationBlue whitingAnisakisFisheryGadiformesLogistic ModelsGeographySeafoodSpainAnimal Science and ZoologySeasonsFood ScienceFoodborne Pathogens and Disease
researchProduct

Ecological Analysis of the Helminth Community of Microtus lusitanicus (Gerbe, 1879) (Rodentia) in Asturias (NW Spain)

2021

Simple Summary The Lusitanian pine vole is an endemic rodent of the Iberian Peninsula, which has a burrowing behaviour and prefers to live underground. It feeds on bark and roots causing severe damage to trees. In Asturias (NW Spain), this species is considered a pest causing economic losses in apple orchards, damaging the tree, and sometimes even causing its death. With the aim to shed light on the helminth community of this rodent pest species and to elucidate which intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect its helminth species, a faunistic-ecological study was carried out. For this purpose, our own collection of 710 voles from several orchards of various locations in Asturias was used. The …

RodentVeterinary medicineArticleLusitanian pine voleRata talperaAbundance (ecology)Helminthsbiology.animalparasitic diseasesSF600-1100HelminthsMicrotus lusitanicusHelmintsEuropean water voleMicrotus lusitanicusGeneral VeterinarybiologyHost (biology)EcologyParasitologiaFossorialAsturias<i>Microtus lusitanicus</i>biology.organism_classificationhelminth communityAstúriesQL1-991SpainParasitologyAnimal Science and ZoologyVolePEST analysisZoologyAnimals
researchProduct

Evaluating diagnostic indicators of urogenital Schistosoma haematobium infection in young women: A cross sectional study in rural South Africa

2018

BackgroundUrine microscopy is the standard diagnostic method for urogenital S. haematobium infection. However, this may lead to under-diagnosis of urogenital schistosomiasis, as the disease may present itself with genital symptoms in the absence of ova in the urine. Currently there is no single reliable and affordable diagnostic method to diagnose the full spectrum of urogenital S. haematobium infection. In this study we explore the classic indicators in the diagnosis of urogenital S. haematobium infection, with focus on young women.MethodsIn a cross-sectional study of 1237 sexually active young women in rural South Africa, we assessed four diagnostic indicators of urogenital S. haematobium…

Rural PopulationPhysiologyCross-sectional studylcsh:MedicineArtificial Gene Amplification and ExtensionUrineUrinePolymerase Chain ReactionGastroenterologySchistosomiasis haematobiaSouth Africa0302 clinical medicineMedicine and Health SciencesSchistosomiasis030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:Scienceqy_185Schistosoma haematobiumMultidisciplinarybiologyEukaryotawc_810Latent class modelBody Fluids3. Good healthHelminth Infectionsqx_355SchistosomaFemaleAnatomyResearch ArticleNeglected Tropical DiseasesAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentUrogenital SchistosomiasisImaging TechniquesUrology030231 tropical medicineImage AnalysisResearch and Analysis MethodsSensitivity and SpecificityYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesDiagnostic MedicineHelminthsInternal medicineparasitic diseasesParasitic DiseasesmedicineHumansAnimalsSex organMolecular Biology TechniquesMolecular BiologySchistosomaIncontinencebusiness.industryGenitourinary systemlcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesGold standard (test)Tropical Diseasesbiology.organism_classificationwj_20InvertebratesSchistosoma HaematobiumCross-Sectional Studieslcsh:QbusinessPLOS ONE
researchProduct

Intestinal helminths of a landlocked ringed seal (Phoca hispida saimensis) population in eastern Finland.

2003

A small, landlocked, endangered ringed seal (Phoca hispida saimensis) population lives as a postglacial relict in Lake Saimaa in eastern Finland. In this study, the intestinal metazoans were examined from a total of 61 Saimaa seals found dead from 1981 to 2001. The helminth fauna was very depauperate. Only one acanthocephalan species, Corynosoma magdaleni, has been able to survive during isolation in the freshwater environment. In addition, only two cestode species were found: Diphyllobothrium ditretum and Schistocephalus sp. However, neither of these larvae developed in the ringed seals. As the newborn pups of Saimaa seals are nursed for about 2 months only one of them was infected by C. m…

Seals EarlessFaunaPopulationEndangered speciesHelminthiasisZoologyFresh WaterBiologyPhocaAcanthocephalaHelminthsparasitic diseasesmedicineHelminthsAnimalseducationFinlandDiphyllobothriumeducation.field_of_studyGeneral VeterinaryEcologyHost (biology)Body WeightGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseIntestinesInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceParasitologyHelminthiasis AnimalParasitology research
researchProduct

Spiralian phylogenomics supports the resurrection of Bryozoa comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta.

2007

Phylogenetic analyses based on 79 ribosomal proteins of 38 metazoans, partly derived from 6 new expressed sequence tag projects for Ectoprocta, Entoprocta, Sipuncula, Annelida, and Acanthocephala, indicate the monophyly of Bryozoa comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta, 2 taxa that have been separated for more than a century based on seemingly profound morphological differences. Our results also show that bryozoans are more closely related to Neotrochozoa, including molluscs and annelids, than to Syndermata, the latter comprising Rotifera and Acanthocephala. Furthermore, we find evidence for the position of Sipuncula within Annelida. These findings suggest that classical developmental and mor…

SipunculabiologyEntoproctaModels GeneticAnnelidaAnatomyGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationBryozoaMonophylyEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsPlatyhelminthsPhylogenomicsGeneticsBryozoaAnimalsSpiraliaAcanthocephalaMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyMolecular biology and evolution
researchProduct

Examination of the Helminth Fauna of the Bermuda Skink, Plestiodon longirostris (Scincidae), Utilizing Faecal Analysis

2021

Plestiodon longirostris is a critically endangered endemic skink living in the Bermuda archipelago. To know their intestinal parasites and evaluate the role that they may have in the conservation of the species, we have carried out a faecal analysis of some samples obtained from several populations. This type of analysis is presented as the most suitable for threatened species. The results show that P. longirostris has incorporated parasites from introduced species in Bermuda, and it is a competent host for these parasites. Nevertheless, the low prevalence of infection of these parasites suggests that they are not actually a threat to the endemic skink populations.

SkinkCritically endangeredMultidisciplinaryPlestiodonbiologyHost (biology)FaunaThreatened speciesZoologyHelminthsIntroduced speciesbiology.organism_classificationCaribbean Journal of Science
researchProduct

The helminth community of the skink Chalcides sexlineatus from Gran Canaria (Canary Islands).

2012

AbstractA survey of the gastrointestinal helminth communities of a population of Chalcides sexlineatus Steindachner, a small skink endemic to Gran Canaria island (Canary Archipelago, Spain), was conducted to determine the prevalence, abundance and species diversity of intestinal parasites in these reptiles. Only three parasite species were found, one cestode, Oochoristica agamae Baylis, 1919 and two nematodes, Parapharyngodon micipsae (Seurat, 1917) and Pharyngodonidae gen. sp. Helminth infracommunities of C. sexlineatus showed low values of abundance and species richness and diversity, being more similar to the helminth community of Tarentola boettgeri boettgeri (Steindachner) rather than …

SkinkMaleeducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyPopulationBiodiversitySpecies diversityGeneral MedicineBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationGastrointestinal TractAbundance (ecology)SpainHelminthsTarentola boettgeriHelminthsAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyFemaleSpecies richnesseducationChordataJournal of helminthology
researchProduct

Morphology of Bertiella studeri (Blanchard, 1891) sensu Stunkard (1940) (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) of human origin and a proposal of criteria for th…

2000

Human material of an African specimen of Bertiella studeri (Blanchard, 1891), a typical intestinal cestode of monkeys, is described. Mature, postmature and gravid proglottides, and eggs, previously inadequately figured, are illustrated and photographed. The description of the species agrees with that provided by Stunkard (1940). A comparative study with other descriptions of the species is made in an attempt to clarify previous findings. The morphological differences reported in various earlier descriptions of the species suggest that B. studeri should be regarded as a "B. studeri species complex". Improvements are required in the descriptions of new future findings in order to clarify the …

Species complexAnoplocephalidaeBertiella mucronataBertiellaCestodaZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsKenyaDiagnosis DifferentialFecesSensuSpainBertiella studeriHelminthsAnimalsCestodaHumansParasitologyFemaleParasite Egg CountFolia parasitologica
researchProduct

Consistent isotopic differences between Schistocephalus spp. parasites and their stickleback hosts

2015

Published version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/dao02893 Parasite−host systems show markedly variable patterns in isotopic fractionation: parasites can be either depleted or enriched in 15N and 13C as compared to their hosts. However, it remains unknown whether isotopic fractionation patterns are similar in comparable parasite−host systems from markedly different ecosystems. Results of this study show that large-sized Schistocephalus spp. endoparasites are consistently depleted in 15N (by on average −2.13 to −2.20‰) as compared to their nine-spined stickleback Pungitius pungitius and three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus hosts. The differences between parasites and host f…

Stable isotope analysisVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Parasittologi: 484Pungitius pungitiusZoologyGasterosteusAquatic SciencePlatyhelminthFish DiseasesPungitiusAnimalsEcosystemGasterosteus aculeatusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsotope analysisCarbon IsotopesVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Parasitology: 484biologyHost (biology)Stable isotope ratioFishesSticklebackTapewormbiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsEndoparasitePlatyhelminthsta1181Nutrient assimilationSchistocephalusDiseases of aquatic organisms
researchProduct