Human Impact on the Composition of Small-Intestine Helminth Infracommunities in Canine Mesocarnivores, with a Special Focus on Echinococcus multilocularis

Moloi, Sibusiso és Csivincsik, Ágnes és Nagy, Eszter és Tari, Tamás és Halász, Tibor és Polgár, Klaudia és Nagy, Gábor (2025) Human Impact on the Composition of Small-Intestine Helminth Infracommunities in Canine Mesocarnivores, with a Special Focus on Echinococcus multilocularis. PARASITOLOGIA, 5 (3). ISSN 2673-6772

[thumbnail of parasitologia-05-00030.pdf] Szöveg
parasitologia-05-00030.pdf

Download (1MB)
Hivatalos webcím (URL): https://doi.org/10.3390/parasitologia5030030

Absztrakt (kivonat)

Estimating the human impact on parasites in wildlife is essential to create efficient strategies to control diseases and improve public health. This study assessed the human influence on the parasite burden of the two commonest canine mesocarnivores, the red fox (N = 194) and the golden jackal (N = 151), in Europe. We compared the infracommunity crowding index, parasite diversity, prevalence, and abundance of different parasite taxa, and the presence of Echinococcus multilocularis between groups of hosts, such as jackals and foxes hunted at different distances from human settlements. The analysis of hosts’ distribution ascertained that 61.2% of the investigated wild canids were hunted in a 500–1750 m ring around the human settlements. Ancylostomatidae proved the most prevalent taxon (>60%), while Echinococcus multilocularis and Dipylidium caninum occurred least frequently. The two taxa that mostly contributed to the crowding of infracommunities were Ancylostomatidae and Toxocaridae, with a negative correlation between their abundances (Spearman’s ρ = −0.445, p < 0.001). Parasite infracommunities were more crowded in Echinococcus multilocularis infected foxes (p = 0.02) and jackals (p = 0.001). Our study highlighted that human modification of landscapes worsened the parasite burden of wild mesocarnivores, which could increase the public health risk of zoonotic parasites.

Tudományterület / tudományág

természettudományok > biológiai tudományok

Kar

Nem releváns

Intézmény

Soproni Egyetem

Mű tipusa: Cikk
SWORD Depositor: Teszt Sword
Felhasználó: Csaba Horváth
A mű MTMT azonosítója: MTMT:36205090
Dátum: 24 Jún 2025 08:15
Utolsó módosítás: 24 Jún 2025 08:15
URI: http://publicatio.uni-sopron.hu/id/eprint/3650

Actions (login required)

Tétel nézet Tétel nézet

Letöltések

Letöltések havi bontásban az elmúlt egy évben