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Gastrointestinal parasites of six large mammals in the Wasgomuwa National Park, Sri Lanka

Dishane K. Hewavithana, Mayuri R. Wijesinghe, Preethi Udagama

2021International Journal for Parasitology Parasites and Wildlife12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

sp). Fresh faecal samples (n = 56) collected from the Wasgomuwa National Park, Sri Lanka were subjected to coprological examination using faecal smears, and the brine floatation technique followed by microscopic identification; quantitative data were accrued using the formol-ether method. The survey revealed a high prevalence of GI parasites, where 86% (48/56) of faecal samples screened positive for parasitic infections. Faecal samples of the civet, buffalo and Leopard recorded 100% prevalence, while the lowest (40%) was recorded for the Grey langur. Eight types of GI parasites were documented: protozoan cysts, platyhelminth ova (three types of digenean and a single cyclophillidean type), nematode ova (strongyle, strongyloid, ascarid, and trichuroid types) and rhabditiform larvae. The buffaloes and civets had a comparatively high number and diversity of GI parasites (buffalo: 7 types, H' = 1.02; civet: 6 types, H' = 1.52), whilst only a single type (digenean) was detected in the Grey langur. Likewise, parasite loads were also highly variable; highest in the bear (486 per g faeces) and lowest in the monkey (10 per g faeces). The outcome of this survey is important on two accounts; i) to fill the knowledge gap on GI parasites of tropical wild mammals, and ii) the revelation of many first-time parasite-host records for some of the threatened wild-dwelling large mammals in Sri Lanka.

Topics & Concepts

ElephasBiologyLeopardHelminthsFecesVeterinary medicineZoologyWildlifePantheraSri lankaPredationEcologyGeographyTanzaniaMedicineEnvironmental planningParasite Biology and Host InteractionsZoonotic diseases and public healthHelminth infection and control