Transmission of Mammalian Piroplasm by an Argasid Tick
IT is the accepted view that parasites belonging to the suborder Piroplasmidae Wenyon, 1926, are exclusively transmitted by “hard” ticks belonging to the family Ixodidae Murray 1,2 . Most piroplasms of domestic animals have more than one Ixodid vector. In the laboratory, small mammal piroplasms belo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 1974-01, Vol.247 (5438), p.225-226 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | IT is the accepted view that parasites belonging to the suborder Piroplasmidae Wenyon, 1926, are exclusively transmitted by “hard” ticks belonging to the family Ixodidae Murray
1,2
. Most piroplasms of domestic animals have more than one Ixodid vector. In the laboratory, small mammal piroplasms belonging to the genera
Babesia
Starcovici, 1893, and
Nuttallia
Franca, 1910, are used as models for the diseases caused by piroplasms of domestic animals. This research, however, suffers from the drawback that the parasites cannot be biologically transmitted, except in two cases. Thus,
Babesia rodhaini
Van den Berghe, Vincke, Chardome and Van den Bulcke, 1950, a rodent piroplasm very commonly used in laboratory investigations, has no known vector; nor has
Babesia hylomysci
Bafort, Tirnperman and Molineux, 1970. The two small mammal piroplasms of which the vectors are known are
Nuttallia microti
Coles, 1914, and
Nuttallia danii
Tsur, Hadani and Pipano, 1960 (and the probably identical
N. tadzhikistanica
(Krylov and Zanina, 1963), Krylov, 1964). The vectors of these piroplasms are
Ixodes trianguliceps
3
Birula, 1895, for the former, and three species of
Hyalomma
and two species of
Rhipicephalus
4
for the latter. All of these vectors belong to the Ixodidae. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/247225a0 |