Abstract

Black-necked swans are distributed across South America and face conservation problems in Chile according to data of the State institution SAG. The aim of this study was to identify helminths and to assess associated tissue damage via histopathology. A total of 19,291 parasites were isolated from 21 examined birds; 17 species were identified, including nematodes, flukes, and tapeworms. Of these, 12 were new host records, 13 were reported for the first time in Chile, and 5 were new records for the Neotropical region. Further, the flukes Schistosomatidae gen. sp. and Echinostoma echinatum are of zoonotic concern. Regarding histopathology, an inflammatory response was found along the birds' entire digestive tract. Nevertheless, it is difficult to declare that there is a clear association between such lesions and isolated parasites, as other noxa could be responsible as well. Although in some cases there was an evident association, such inflammatory responses and necrosis were minimal, as occurred with Capillaria, Retinometra, Catatropis, Echinostoma, and Schistosomatidae gen. sp. Nevertheless, Epomidiostomum vogelsangi caused granulomatous injuries, an important inflammatory response, and necrosis, but it always circumscribed to superficial layers of the gizzard. Conversely, Paramonostomum was not associated with an inflammatory response despite a high parasitic load.

Highlights

  • Parasitism is a trophic association between individuals of two different species where at least one of them feeds off another species

  • Co-infections between different species of the same genus were recorded for N. attenuatus/N. breviserialis (4.8%), P. alveatum/P. chabaudi (14.3%), and E. echinatum/E. mendax (14.3%)

  • Coinfections between species of the same family were recorded for Trichuridae (52.4%), Notocotylidae (47.6%), Echinostomatidae (14.3%), and Hymenolepididae (23.8%)

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Summary

Introduction

Parasitism is a trophic association between individuals of two different species where at least one of them (the parasite) feeds off another species (the host). Avian hosts serve as habitats that provide resources to parasites; the host is damaged or potentially loses some of its nutritional resources and has to develop an immune response against the parasite, which is costly. The costs of parasitism are not always evident for most avian species, as the host can tolerate the presence of parasites; otherwise, diseases associated with parasitism could be overshadowed by predation of sick individuals. C. melancoryphus is considered as a least concern species (BIRDLIFE INTERNATIONAL, 2016), according to local data provided by the State institution Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero (SAG), this swan has conservancy issues along its Southern distribution in Chile (CHILE, 2018)

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