Search results for "lungworms"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

The European wildcats (Felis silvestris silvestris) as reservoir hosts of Troglostrongylus brevior (Strongylida: Crenosomatidae) lungworms.

2014

The increasing reports of Troglostrongylus brevior lungworm in domestic cats from Italy and Spain raised questions on its factual distribution and on the role wildcats play as reservoirs of these parasites. Carcasses of 21 wildcats were collected in natural parks of southern Italy (i.e., Catania, Sicily n = 5 and Matera, Basilicata n = 16) and biometrically and genetically identified as Felis silvestris silvestris, but two as hybrids. Troglostrongylus brevior and Eucoleus aerophilus lungworms were found in 15 (71.4%) and 7 (33.3%) individuals, respectively, being five (23.8%) co-infected by the two species. Both lungworms showed an aggregated distribution in the host population, assessed by…

Lung DiseasesVeterinary medicinePopulationbiology.animal_breedEndangered speciesSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaBiologyTroglostrongylus breviorWildcat hybridTroglostrongylus breviorFelisAnimalseducationStrongylidaEucoleus aerophiluWildcatDisease ReservoirsStrongylida InfectionsFelis silvestris silvestriseducation.field_of_studyGeneral VeterinaryFelisEucoleus aerophilusGeneral MedicineLungwormsbiology.organism_classificationItalyWildcat hybridsEuropean wildcatStrongylidaParasitologyEucoleus aerophilusLungwormFe lis silvestris silvestri
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Phylogeny, epidemiology and microhabitat preferences of lungworms (Pseudaliidae) in cetaceans from teh Western Mediterranean

2023

A pesar de tener una cierta reputación negativa, los parásitos pueden ofrecer una información importante sobre sus hospedadores, habiendo sido reconocidos como herramientas valiosas en varios estudios que investigan el comportamiento (Balbuena y Raga 1991), la salud (Aznar et al. 2005; Gkafas et al. 2020), la dieta (Dailey y Otto 1982), la migración (Ten et al. 2022), la estructura social (Balbuena et al. 1995) o la discriminación de stocks de cetáceos (Aznar et al. 1995). Los helmintos que parasitan a los cetáceos se pueden separar en cuatro grupos distintos: acantocéfalos (20 spp.), cestodos (38 spp.), digeneos (54 spp.) y nematodos (62 spp.). De éstos, los nematodos son los más diversos …

cetaceanstaxonomytransmissionUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAlungwormspseudaliidaehost specificityhabitat selectionparasitesphylogeny
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