Gram Randall (chequeheron44)
The present study describes the helminth community collected from juveniles of Dermatonotus muelleri (Anura Microhylidae) from the Chaco Seco Ecoregion. Helminths were found in 80.0% of specimens examined (n = 16). The helminth community of this microhylid presented very low species richness; a total of 1,339 specimens belonging four helminth species were found; three adult nematodes, Aplectana hylambatis, Cosmocerca podicipinus and Parapharyngodon sp., and an adult cestode, Ophiotaenia sp. Parasites were found in the large and small intestines. Maximum helminth richness was 2 species per infected frog. The nematode A. hylambatis presented the highest prevalence and was the most abundant (d = 0.97) indicating that it is the dominant species in the community (I = 63.0). Host snout-vent length did not influence the intensity of infection or the richness of helminth species at the community component level. Two species showed significant co-variation (A. hylambatis and Parapharyngodon sp.). The high prevalence of infection and number of parasites found for A. hylambatis could be related to the characteristics of their life cycles; the possession of the infective stage (L3) protected inside the egg membrane would have benefits against extreme drought in the area in which the study was conducted. The studies of helminths in the Chaco Seco Ecoregion, an area seriously threatened in terms of its biodiversity, are incipient. This is the second study that has been carried out to determine the structure of the parasite community in amphibians of this ecoregion.Hoplias aff. malabaricus is abundant in the Mogi-Guaçu River. The aim of this study was to perform an inventory of the species of metazoan that parasite this species of fish taken from oxbow lakes of the Mogi-Guaçu River. The Mann-Whitney test was used to statistically analyze the possible influence of the sex of the host on the group with the highest parasite richness and the greatest abundance of parasites. Simpson’s diversity index was used to determine parasite diversity among the zoological groups of parasites of H. aff. malabaricus with the highest index. A total of 78 specimens of H. aff. malabaricus were examined. Among the zoological groups of metazoans found, the phylum Nematoda had the greatest number of species. Among these, the larval stage of Contracaecum sp. was most abundant. The sex of the host had a significant effect, with parasites more abundant in female fish (Z(U)=0.043; p less then 0.05). The digenean Parspina argentinensis, the nematodes Procamallanus (S.) iheringi, Rhabdochona acuminata and Hysterothylacium sp. and copepods Vaigamus sp. and Lernaea cyprinacea have not previously been recorded as parasites of H. aff. malabaricus.Blastocystis sp. is one of the most prevalent human parasites with a vast variety of non-human hosts. The aim of the present study was to determine the subtype distribution of Blastocystis in humans and trace the route of transmission by molecular data and phylogenetic analysis. Stool samples were collected from patients who referred to 14 medical laboratories in Kurdistan, Iran. All the samples were examined using the direct wet mount and formalinether concentration techniques. DNA extraction was carried out for 30 microscopically positive isolates and 33 negative samples. DNA amplification and subtype identification were also performed using the barcoding method and sequencing techniques. Of 1383 stool samples, 239 (17.3%) were infected with Blastocystis sp. Out of the 24 sequenced isolates, two (8.3%), six (25%), and 16 (66.6 %) belonged to the ST1, ST2, and ST3 subtypes, respectively. Bioinformatics analysis indicated that all the isolates were genetically similar to animal isolates. Blastocystis sp. was very common and ST1, ST2, and ST3 subtypes were prevalent in the study population. Bioinformatics analysis suggests that zoonotic transmission plays an important role in Blastocystis sp. distribution in Kurdistan province.Two