A frequent roundworm Baylisascaris transfuga in overpopulated brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Slovakia: a problem worthy of attention

The genus Baylisascaris (order Ascaridida) includes numerous relatively host-specific nematodes, which are common in intestines of wild mammals. Some of them may have impact on veterinary and public health, as their larvae have the potential to cause visceral, ocular, and/or neural larva migrans in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta parasitologica 2018-03, Vol.63 (1), p.167-174
Hauptverfasser: Štrkolcová, Gabriela, Goldová, Mária, Šnábel, Viliam, Špakulová, Marta, Orosová, Tatiana, Halán, Miloš, Mojžišová, Jana
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container_title Acta parasitologica
container_volume 63
creator Štrkolcová, Gabriela
Goldová, Mária
Šnábel, Viliam
Špakulová, Marta
Orosová, Tatiana
Halán, Miloš
Mojžišová, Jana
description The genus Baylisascaris (order Ascaridida) includes numerous relatively host-specific nematodes, which are common in intestines of wild mammals. Some of them may have impact on veterinary and public health, as their larvae have the potential to cause visceral, ocular, and/or neural larva migrans in a wide range of mammals, birds, and humans. Baylisascaris transfuga is a parasite occurring in a range of bear species throughout the world. We present the current data on B. transfuga occurrence in brown bears from a relatively restricted territory of the Poľana Protected Landscape Area in Central Slovakia, obtained by traditional methods (faecal examination, morphology). Species affiliation was confirmed by employing molecular markers generating nuclear 28S and mitochondrial cox1 sequences in adult worms. Based on 17 examined samples (15 excrements and two intestines of young bear females), the occurrence of B. transfuga in the surveyed area was assessed as 52.9%. Both bear females were infected with adult and juvenile worms. Due to the high density of bears in the locality, the high infection rate with ascarids, and the huge number of eggs produced by the parasites, it is apparent that the respective environment, including the inhabited areas, might be markedly contaminated by Baylisascaris eggs. The ability of B. transfuga to serve as a zoonotic agent has not been unambiguously proved; however, this attribute should be considered and subjected to further research.
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source MEDLINE; SpringerNature Journals
subjects Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
Animals
Ascaridida Infections - epidemiology
Ascaridida Infections - parasitology
Ascaridida Infections - veterinary
Ascaridoidea - anatomy & histology
Ascaridoidea - classification
Ascaridoidea - genetics
Ascaridoidea - isolation & purification
Bears
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Birds
Cluster Analysis
DNA, Helminth - chemistry
DNA, Helminth - genetics
DNA, Ribosomal - chemistry
DNA, Ribosomal - genetics
Ecology
Eggs
Electron Transport Complex IV - genetics
European brown bear
Feces - parasitology
Females
intestinal nematode
Intestine
Landscape protection
Larvae
Mammals
Medical Microbiology
Microbiology
Microscopy
Mitochondria
molecular analysis
morphology
Nematodes
Parasites
Parasitology
Phylogeny
Prevalence
Public health
RNA, Ribosomal, 28S - genetics
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Slovakia - epidemiology
Territory
Ursidae - parasitology
Veterinary medicine
title A frequent roundworm Baylisascaris transfuga in overpopulated brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Slovakia: a problem worthy of attention
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