Abstract

This paper is a survey of the parasite diversity, prevalence and infection intensity in anurans in diverse ecological settings in West Africa. The settings included natural habitats (rainforests, freshwater creeks, Guinea and Sudan savannas), monoculture plantations (cocoa, cotton and oil palm), urbanized and urbanizing rainforest biotopes and polluted environments due to oil industry activities. The natural habitats had higher amphibian species diversity, moderate parasite prevalence and low infection intensity, showing a balance in the host/parasite relationship. These habitats yielded most of the monogeneans, among which were new species. The freshwater creek biotope had low amphibian diversity, but hosts from this environment harbored several parasite taxa, a situation attributed to a prolonged wet season, high environmental humidity and persistent breeding pools for insect vectors in this area. The monoculture plantations were characterized by high parasite prevalence but lower infection intensity. For example, in the Pendjari Biosphere Reserve in Bénin Republic, the Agricultural Zone (AZ) had higher parasite prevalence values, while the National Park (NP) and Buffer Zone (BZ) had higher infection intensities. Higher prevalence was attributed to the single or combined effects of vector population explosion, immune-suppression by agrochemicals, nutrient enrichment and eutrophication from fertilizer use. The lower infection intensity was attributed to the inhibitory effect of the pesticide-contaminated environment on the free-living larval stages of parasites. The adverse effect of pesticide contamination was also evident in the lower infection intensity recorded in the anurans from the cocoa plantations at Ugboke in comparison to those from the pesticide-free village settlement. Urbanization reduced host diversity and numbers and increased the vector population, resulting in unusually high parasite prevalence and infection intensities at Diobu and Port Harcourt and high prevalence recorded for Ophidascaris larvae in the anurans of Evbuabogun. Oil pollution in the mangrove community reduced both host and parasite diversity; infection intensity was also low due to the adverse conditions confronting free-living stages of parasites in their development milieu. The high prevalence values obtained for monogeneans (Polystoma spp.) in Ptychadena spp. from Ogoniland was presumed to have resulted from host tadpole sequestration and exposure to high oncomiracidia burden in the few hospitable ponds. Also reviewed is the phenomenon of amphibian paratenism, a strategy on which many helminth parasites rely on for their trophic transmission to their definitive hosts.

Highlights

  • We examined the parasite diversity in amphibians from various ecological settings where amphibians and their parasites have been studied in West Africa

  • This situation contrasts with findings at the Okomu National Park, where the tree frogs were infected with 13 helminth parasites, including cestodes, monogeneans, digeneans and nematodes, at low infection intensity [73]

  • Diverse scenarios play out in the ecological biotopes of West Africa, and these have their peculiar influence on the parasite diversity in the amphibians of these habitats

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Studies on the parasites of amphibians in West Africa date back to the 1920s, with more investigations undertaken in Francophone countries A new perspective connecting amphibian parasitism with host ecology came into focus from the contributions of environmental parasitologists [27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37] Information from these studies assisted us in finding a nexus between host environments and parasite diversity, distribution and host specificity. This may inadvertently skew the examples cited in this discussion to literature emanating from this area

Rainforest Biotopes
Freshwater Creeks
The Savannas
Altered Environments
Urbanization
Urbanized Rainforest Environment
Urbanizing Rainforest
Polluted Environments
Amphibian Paratenism
Acathocephala
Cestoda
Oochoristica
Diplopylidium
Larval Nematodes
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call