Multi-season survey of ixodid tick species collected from domestic dogs in Chad, Africa

Ticks are medically important vectors of pathogens, many of which are zoonotic or impact domestic animal and/or wildlife health. Climate change, landuse modifications, and increasing interactions between domestic animals, wildlife, and humans have resulted in changes in tick-host dynamics and the em...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary parasitology (Amsterdam) 2025-01, Vol.57, p.101165, Article 101165
Hauptverfasser: Cleveland, Christopher A., Friedman, Morgan, Thompson, Alec T., Haynes, Ellen, Coker, Sarah M., Bryan, John A., Sidouin, Metinou, Ouakou, Philip Tchindebet, Ngandolo, Bongo Nare Richard, Yabsley, Michael J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ticks are medically important vectors of pathogens, many of which are zoonotic or impact domestic animal and/or wildlife health. Climate change, landuse modifications, and increasing interactions between domestic animals, wildlife, and humans have resulted in changes in tick-host dynamics and the emergence of novel pathogens worldwide. Therefore, describing the host and geographic ranges of vector species is essential in assessing disease risk, especially in understudied areas, and should be conducted in a One Health context. In sub-Saharan Africa, previous work on ticks has focused primarily on those species most relevant to domestic livestock or humans, highlighting a significant knowledge gap concerning species of ticks that infest domestic animals in rural areas. The objective of this study was to investigate the species diversity of ticks on domestic dogs in rural areas of Chad, Africa. From 2019 to 2022, we collected 3412 ixodid ticks from 435 domestic dogs from 23 villages in Chad, Africa during both dry and wet seasons. Ticks were identified to species using morphological techniques and/or molecular analyses of the 16S rDNA, 12S rDNA, and cytochrome oxidase I gene regions. We identified 11 species of ticks from dogs including Amblyomma variegatum, an Amblyomma marmoreum complex species, Haemaphysalis leachi, a Haemaphysalis sp., Hyalomma impressum, Hyalomma truncatum, Rhipicephalus decoloratus, Rhipicephalus guilhoni, Rhipicephalus muhsamae, Rhipicephalus linnaei (=R. sanguineus ‘tropical lineage’), and a Rhipicephalus sp. Several of these tick species are known vectors for important canine and zoonotic pathogens and some are more commonly associated with cattle hosts. Our results show that sampling ticks from domestic dogs provides an opportunity to examine vectors that may be infesting domestic animals, agricultural animals, wildlife, and humans as hosts in an understudied area. [Display omitted] •Tick-borne diseases are significant concern across sub-Saharan Africa.•Limited data on ticks of animals and people in Chad, Africa•A high diversity of tick species infested domestic dogs in Chad.•Many detected tick species associated with important pathogens.
ISSN:2405-9390
2405-9390
DOI:10.1016/j.vprsr.2024.101165