Abstract

Ngaoundere Gudali zebu cattle naturally exposed to Simulium damnosum s.l. and Culicoides spp. bites were examined during 4 years for O. ochengi adult worm acquisition, Onchocerca ochengi and Onchocerca gutturosa skin microfilaria dynamics, and IgG 1 and IgG 2 antibody subclass responses. Eleven animals acquired a total of 465 O. ochengi nodules (average of 17 per female and 72 per male). The O. ochengi nodule load was highly variable in individual animals and exacerbated in mature male cattle. Three patterns of acquisition of O. ochengi (resistant to new infestation, early susceptibility and late susceptibility), not associated with Simulium biting intensity ( P>0.05), were distinguished. The minimum prepatent periods for O. ochengi nodules, O. ochengi microfilariae and O. gutturosa microfilariae were 10, 20 and 21 months, respectively. The O. ochengi microfilaria density significantly ( P<0.001) increased with age, was higher in young mature bulls than female animals ( P<0.001) and finally reached highest levels ( P<0.005) during the dry season. Antibody responses to Ov10/Ov11 recombinant O. volvulus antigens were predominantly of the IgG 1 subclass. High levels of this subclass (not IgG 2) observed in new born calves declined to almost zero levels at the age of 5–8 months but IgG 1 levels significantly increased ( P<0.05) with age subsequently during patency. Put together the acquisition and accumulation of O. ochengi parasites in zebu cattle, apart from being season, sex (gender) and host age associated, may also suggest a density-dependent regulation of parasite establishment in a proportion of the exposed population.

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