Abstract

Total DNA was isolated from adult lungworms of the genus Dictyocaulus, collected from cattle, moose ( Alces alces) and roe deer ( Capreolus capreolus) in Sweden. The second ribosomal internal transcribed spacer was amplified with PCR, and DNA sequences were determined from nine individual worms that all came from different hosts in order to avoid analysis of siblings. The sequence data obtained were aligned and compared with similar data derived from German lungworm isolates from cattle and fallow deer ( Cervus dama). These analyses clearly showed that specimens of the cattle lungworm, Dictyocaulus viviparus, were almost identical irrespective of their geographical origin. However, when the second internal transcribed spacer sequence of D. viviparus was compared with that of lungworms from moose and roe deer, major differences were noticed. Although lungworms collected from these cervids had identical second internal transcribed spacer sequences, they proved to be genetically different from Dictyocaulus eckerti of German fallow deer, displaying a 66.5% similarity. In an evolutionary tree, inferred by maximum likelihood analysis, the Dictyocaulus species from cattle and wild cervids clustered as compared with Dictyocaulus filaria from sheep. The study has thus demonstrated that A. alces and C. capreolus in Sweden are parasitised with a Dictyocaulus species that is different from D. viviparus and D. eckerti, indicating that we are dealing with a new species in moose and roe deer.

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