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1.
Parasitol Res ; 119(7): 2059-2065, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32447516

ABSTRACT

Lice from family Echinophthiriidae are of the few insects that have successfully colonized marine environment living as ectoparasites of pinnipeds, i.e., sea lions, seals, and the walrus. They have developed unique adaptations to cope with the amphibious lifestyle of their hosts. Because eggs do not survive underwater, lice could only reproduce when their host remains on pack ice enough time. Consequently, lice generations per year are limited by host haul-out behavior. The objective of this work is to study the effect of host sex and age class, and the annual variation on the prevalence and mean abundance of Antarctophthirus lobodontis in crabeater seals from the Antarctic Peninsula. During three consecutive field-seasons, we collected lice from 41 crabeater seals (23 females, 16 males, 2 indeterminate, being 24 adults, and 17 juveniles). We investigated this effect on the prevalence and mean abundance by a generalized linear model formulation in a Bayesian framework. According to the lowest Deviance Index Criterion model, sex host does not affect prevalence nor mean abundance. We found that juveniles present greater abundance and prevalence than adults, possibly due to foraging habits. They spent more time on the ice than adults in groups of dozens of animals. This behavior would favor both egg development and lice transmission. We do not find adult females with lice, which suggests that transmission of A. lobodontis should be horizontal. The high mean abundance of lice in 2014 could be associated with an unusual increase in Lobodon carcinophaga population, probably related to the pack-ice availability and zooplankton abundance.


Subject(s)
Anoplura/pathogenicity , Lice Infestations/epidemiology , Lice Infestations/transmission , Sea Lions/parasitology , Seals, Earless/parasitology , Walruses/parasitology , Acclimatization , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Bayes Theorem , Female , Ice Cover , Male , Seasons , Sex Factors
2.
Parasitol Res ; 108(5): 1243-51, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21140167

ABSTRACT

Understanding factors that shape host selection has been a classic issue in ecology, evolutionary biology, and epidemiological investigation. During the survey from 2000 to 2009, a total of 11,216 individuals of small mammals were captured from Yunnan Province in southwestern China. The captured small mammalian hosts belong to five orders, ten families, 35 genera, and 65 species and from their body surface, 38,885 individuals of ectoparasitic sucking lice were collected, which represent five families, seven genera, and 31 species. Based on niche overlap of dominant sucking lice on their primary hosts, we used hierarchical cluster analysis to sort different sucking louse species' resource utilizations of similar kind into respective categories. Given λ<5, there are only two groups clustered, however, sucking louse species' resource utilization was sorted into eight respective categories at λ=15. The results revealed that most species of sucking lice usually had high host specificity and a certain species of sucking louse usually restricted to one or few small mammalian species as their dominant hosts. Correspondence analysis was used to visualize associations between parasitic sucking lice and their small mammalian hosts, which suggested three different patterns of host resource utilization: species specialists, genera generalists, and multiple selections. For example, Sathrax durus (Johnson) only parasitized on species of Tupaia belangeri (Wagner), Hoplopleura edentula (Fahredholz) predominatly on genus of Eothenomys, and Polyplax reclinata (Nitzsch) on Family of Soricidae. Our results demonstrate that sucking lice have high host specificity and this might be due to coevolution between sucking lice and their hosts.


Subject(s)
Anoplura/physiology , Anoplura/pathogenicity , Ectoparasitic Infestations/parasitology , Mammals/parasitology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , China , Cluster Analysis
3.
Vet Rec ; 153(6): 176-9, 2003 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12934729

ABSTRACT

Young calves which died on three dairy farms in England and Wales had generalised pallor and heavy infestations of the long-nosed sucking louse, Linognothus vituli. Surviving calves had packed-cell volumes, haemoglobin concentrations and red blood cell counts below the reference ranges, consistent with anaemia, and they were also heavily infested with lice. No other causes of anaemia were identified. It is proposed that heavy infestations with L. vituli should be considered when investigating the cause of anaemia in calves.


Subject(s)
Anemia/veterinary , Anoplura/pathogenicity , Cattle Diseases/parasitology , Lice Infestations/veterinary , Anemia/etiology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/mortality , Erythrocyte Count , Hemoglobins/analysis , Lice Infestations/complications , Lice Infestations/mortality
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