Epidemiological study of ticks collected from the northern tamandua (Tamandua mexicana) and a literature review of ticks of Myrmecophagidae anteaters

[Display omitted] •Twenty-nine ixodid tick species were recorded on Myrmecophagidae anteaters.•Amblyomma nodosum, A. calcaratum and A. auricularium are the most common ticks.•The northern anteater is the least studied with only 11 tick species registered. The family Myrmecophagidae contains three an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ticks and tick-borne diseases 2019-08, Vol.10 (5), p.1146-1156
Hauptverfasser: Muñoz-García, Claudia Irais, Guzmán-Cornejo, Carmen, Rendón-Franco, Emilio, Villanueva-García, Claudia, Sánchez-Montes, Sokani, Acosta-Gutierrez, Roxana, Romero-Callejas, Evangelina, Díaz-López, Hilda, Martínez-Carrasco, Carlos, Berriatua, Eduardo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Twenty-nine ixodid tick species were recorded on Myrmecophagidae anteaters.•Amblyomma nodosum, A. calcaratum and A. auricularium are the most common ticks.•The northern anteater is the least studied with only 11 tick species registered. The family Myrmecophagidae contains three anteater species: Tamandua mexicana (Saussure, 1860), Tamandua tetradactyla (Linnaeus, 1758) and Myrmecophaga tridactyla (Linnaeus, 1758). These American anteater species currently face many conservation threats, among which road traffic accidents stand out. Parasitic studies on this family are scarce, and some of them include records of ectoparasites. Specifically for northern tamandua (T. mexicana), there is a lack of studies at population level. The objectives of the present research were to carry out an epidemiological study of tick species and its abundance on road-killed northern anteater specimens and, moreover, to perform a literature review of ticks collected from anteaters of Myrmecophagidae family. Five tick species were identified, including four Amblyomma spp. and Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato, on 23 road-killed anteaters. Tick infestation prevalence was 43% (10/23), with a median tick infestation intensity of 3.5 per anteater (interquartile range 1–13.7). The bibliographic review highlighted the existence of twenty-nine ixodid species recorded on the three anteater species from 14 countries, mainly Brazil. The most common tick species on the Myrmecophagidae family are Amblyomma nodosum, A. calcaratum, A. cajennense sensu lato and A. auricularium. Some of these ixodids were also described as vectors of pathogens. Further studies are needed to evaluate the impact of ticks on anteater fitness, and to assess the role of these mammals as reservoirs of vector-borne diseases.
ISSN:1877-959X
1877-9603
DOI:10.1016/j.ttbdis.2019.06.005