Abstract

The genus Gnathostoma comprises 17 species, whose adult specimens are found in the stomach serosa of animals that consume raw fish; some species of the genus are zoonotic agents. The present study describes the presence of a nematode (Gnathostomatidae) parasitizing the digestive tract of Colomesus psittacus in the Ilha de Marajó in the eastern Brazilian Amazon. Thirty specimens of C. psittacus were collected in the municipality of Soure, Ilha de Marajó, state of Pará, Brazil, transported to the laboratory, necropsied and the helminths were collected and fixed. Of the 30 fish that were studied, 16.67% were parasitized with nematodes. The nematode larvae found encysted in the intestinal serosa have anterior region with two lips, each with a pair of papillae; a cephalic bulb armed with six rows of discontinuous spines; four cervical sacs; a claviform esophagus; cuticular striations along the body; a simple excretory pore; and a short tail ending in a mucron. These morphological structures are diagnostic characters of the genus Gnathostoma, whose adults parasitize the stomach of carnivorous mammals and, rarely, the stomach of fish. However, fish, amphibians, reptiles, and birds are intermediate hosts of the third-stage larvae (L3), and humans may act as accidental hosts.

Highlights

  • The genus Gnathostoma (OWEN, 1836) comprises 17 species: G. spinigerum Owen, 1836; G. gracile Diesing, 1839; G. socialis Leidy, 1858; G. hispidum Fedtschenko, 1872; G. turgidum Stossich, 1902; G. doloresi Tubangui, 1925; G. americanum Travassos, 1925; G. didelphis Chandler, 1932; G. procyonis Chandler, 1932; G. nipponicum Yamaguti, 1941; G. minutum Schuurmans-Stekhoven, 1943; G. brasiliense Ruiz, 1952; G. miyazakii Anderson, 1964; G. vietnamicum Le-Van, 1965; G. malaysiae Miyazaki & Dunn, 1965; G. binucleatum Almeyda-Artigas, 1991; and G. lamothei Bertoni-Ruiz, et al, 2005. feral dogs and cats are the most commonly identified definitive hosts of Gnathostoma species, adult parasites have been identified in tigers, leopards, lions, martens, otters, opossums, and raccoons

  • The present study describes the presence of a nematode (Gnathostomatidae) parasitizing the digestive tract of Colomesus psittacus in the Ilha de Marajó in the eastern Brazilian Amazon

  • The present study describes the presence of nematodes (Gnathostomatidae) in the coelomic cavity of C. psittacus collected at the Ilha de Marajó, eastern Brazilian Amazon

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Summary

Introduction

Feral dogs and cats are the most commonly identified definitive hosts of Gnathostoma species, adult parasites have been identified in tigers, leopards, lions, martens, otters, opossums, and raccoons. Colomesus psittacus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) is a demersal fish found in marine-estuarine waters up to 40 m deep as well as in freshwater. It is distributed along the Gulf of Paria (Venezuela), extending to the eastern Brazilian Amazon (CERVIGÓN et al, 1992), and is found in the Amazon estuary in Brazil (CAMARGO & MAIA, 2008)

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