Abstract

BackgroundNematodes of the subfamily Ostertagiinae appear to be rather specific to a species or family of hosts, but some are observed in a wide variety of hosts. The nematode Ostertagia leptospicularis draws special attention due to its presence or absence among the same host species in different European countries. Therefore, this paper focuses mainly on the host specificity among nematodes of the subfamily Ostertagiinae. The second aim of this study is to assess the possibility of treating O. leptospicularis as an Ostertagia species complex.MethodsData were gathered from post-mortem examinations of domestic and wild ruminants (n = 157), as well as bibliographical references (n = 96), which were pooled and discussed. The research area was limited to European countries, hence the studied ostertagiine species are limited to native ones; likewise, the host species. Special emphasis was placed on the mean abundance values that allowed a typical host or hosts for each nematode species to be specified. Correspondence analysis was performed to confirm the stated host specificity.ResultsThe analysis revealed that nematodes of this subfamily tend to use ruminants from a particular subfamily as their principal host. The results indicate that Ostertagia leptospicularis, similar to Teladorsagia circumcincta, may represent a potential species complex. This nematode, as the sole member of the subfamily Ostertagiinae, occurs in almost all representatives of the Bovidae subfamily, as well as in the Cervidae.ConclusionsDespite the stated narrow host specificity, the results obtained may suggest that O. leptospicularis is not strongly connected to any host or is comparably associated with a very wide and diverse group of hosts (Cervidae, Bovidae). The Ostertagia complex may have particular cryptic species or strains typical for any individual host or group of hosts. Such a conclusion requires further investigations on a wider scale.

Highlights

  • Nematodes of the subfamily Ostertagiinae appear to be rather specific to a species or family of hosts, but some are observed in a wide variety of hosts

  • The majority of nematode species were found in more than one host species; S. antipini and M. marshalli only occurred in roe deer and Tatra chamois, respectively

  • The same applies to O. antipini, M. dagestanica and the largest species of Cervidae, moose, which has currently arisen as its principal host [23]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nematodes of the subfamily Ostertagiinae appear to be rather specific to a species or family of hosts, but some are observed in a wide variety of hosts. Parasites are able to colonize one or more host species, and can be classified as specialists, specific for a species or a family of hosts, or generalists, capable of infecting a wide variety of hosts [1]. Their unambiguous distinction is supported by morphological features; in some cases their species specialization started to be questioned. Teladorsagia circumcincta (Stadleman, 1894) was treated as a single species that occurs in various hosts (both domestic and wild ruminants). Similar doubts may be raised in relation to the genus Ostertagia; such data are not yet available [5]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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