Abstract

In Shiqu County of the Qinghai–Tibet plateau, many wild and domestic mammals are involved in the transmission cycles of Echinococcus spp. Echinococcus multilocularis and Echinococcus granulosus genotype G1 (sheep strain) are sympatrically distributed in the plateau. In 1995, we identified a unique strobilate stage of Echinococcus from the Tibetan fox, Vulpes ferrilata, but considered it to be a variant of E. multilocularis. Subsequent molecular genetic studies revealed that a hydatid cyst from the plateau pika, Ochotona curzoniae, had unique mitochondrial DNA sequences which are dissimilar to any published sequences of Echinococcus. The same sequences were subsequently found in adult worms from Tibetan foxes. Morphological, genetic and ecological features of the cestode led us to designate a new species Echinococcus shiquicus. E. shiquicus has been found at other areas surveyed on the plateau; however, no infections in humans caused by E. shiquicus have been yet identified.

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