Abstract

We report three cases of sparganosis due to plerocercoids of the tapeworm Spirometra sp. in captive meerkats (Suricata suricatta) from a zoo exhibit in the southeastern United States. Two meerkats were euthanized, one due to an uncontrollable seizure and the other due to trauma, and at necropsy cysts containing cestode larvae were observed. A third meerkat had a subcutaneous nodule surgically removed, which contained similar larvae. The third animal died years later, and had numerous cestode larvae in the pleural and peritoneal cavities. The larvae were morphologically identified as plerocercoids of diphyllobothriidean cestodes. On necropsy, multiple nodules, ranging in size from 2.5 to 3.0 cm, were observed in the subcutaneous tissue and muscles. Multifocally, separating skeletal muscle fibers were longitudinal and transversal sections of cestode larva. Histologically, parasitic cysts contained large numbers of neutrophils and macrophages, admixed with proteinaceous material. Molecular and phylogenetic analyses confirmed that specimens from one of the meerkats belonged to the genus Spirometra and was closely related to Spirometra plerocercoids isolated from a snake from the United States and wild felids from South America. Meerkats likely became infected by ingesting infected second intermediate hosts, such as amphibians and reptiles that may have entered the exhibit. Management practices that minimize access of meerkats and other susceptible hosts to intermediate hosts should be implemented.

Highlights

  • The members of the genus Spirometra (Cestoda; Diphyllobothriidea) are intestinal cestodes of carnivore hosts

  • We report three cases of sparganosis due to plerocercoids of the tapeworm Spirometra sp. in captive meerkats (Suricata suricatta) from a zoo exhibit in the southeastern United States

  • Molecular and phylogenetic analyses confirmed that specimens from one of the meerkats belonged to the genus Spirometra and was closely related to Spirometra plerocercoids isolated from a snake from the United States and wild felids from South America

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Summary

Introduction

The members of the genus Spirometra (Cestoda; Diphyllobothriidea) are intestinal cestodes of carnivore hosts. In North America, Spirometra mansonoides (Mueller, 1935), infects domestic cats and dogs, and wild canids, felids and procyonids (Bowman et al, 2002; Mcintosh, 1937; Mueller, 1935, 1974). The validity of this species, has been recently questioned by Kuchta et al (2020), who proposed to provi­ sionally refer to North American isolates as Spirometra decipiens species complex 2. The hermaphroditic adult cestodes are present in the small intestine of the carnivore definitive host and release operculated eggs. These eggs embryonate in fresh water, in which a ciliated coracidium (first larval stage) emerges. This condition is known as sparganosis, which, depending on the affected organ and degree of proliferation, may range from benign to fatal

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