| Literature DB >> 29914556 |
Malek J Hallinger1,2, Anja Taubert3, Carlos Hermosilla3, Frank Mutschmann4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exotic reptiles such as tortoises, have become increasingly common domestic pets worldwide and are known to host different gastrointestinal parasites. Some of these parasites bear zoonotic potential. In the present survey, we parasitologically examined tortoise faecal samples (n = 1005) from 19 different species held as pets in private German households and German zoological gardens.Entities:
Keywords: Exotic pets; Herpetology; Pet reptiles; Reptile medicine; Tortoise; Tortoise endoparasites
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914556 PMCID: PMC6006665 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-2936-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Examined faecal samples of tortoises and origin of sender (total n = 1005)
| Tortoise species | Common name | No. examined | Origin (private/vet/zoo) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Hermann’s tortoise | 597 | 491/105/1 |
| Unkown species | – | 169 | 143/26/0 |
|
| Common tortoise | 65 | 42/21/2 |
|
| Horsefield’s tortoise | 61 | 38/23/0 |
|
| Marginated tortoise | 50 | 43/7/0 |
|
| Leopard tortoise | 11 | 6/4/1 |
|
| African spurred tortoise | 10 | 8/1/1 |
|
| Indian star tortoise | 10 | 8/2/0 |
|
| Red-footed tortoise | 7 | 4/1/2 |
|
| Aldabra giant tortoise | 5 | 3/1/1 |
|
| Egyptian tortoise | 4 | 3/0/1 |
|
| Pancake tortoise | 4 | 1/1/2 |
|
| Burmese star tortoise | 3 | 0/0/3 |
|
| Radiated tortoise | 3 | 1/1/1 |
|
| Elongated tortoise | 2 | 2/0/0 |
|
| Spider tortoise | 2 | 2/0/0 |
|
| Bell’s Hinge-backed tortoise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
|
| Impressed tortoise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
|
| Angulate toroise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
Performed necropsies of tortoises, tortoise species and origin of sender (n = 49)
| Tortoise species | Common name | No. examined | Origin (private/vet/zoo) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Hermann’s tortoise | 20 | 17/2/1 |
| Unkown species | – | 7 | 4/3/0 |
|
| Horsefield’s tortoise | 5 | 5/0/0 |
|
| Common tortoise | 5 | 2/3/0 |
|
| Leopard tortoise | 5 | 5/0/0 |
|
| Egyptian tortoise | 2 | 2/0/0 |
|
| Spider tortoise | 2 | 0/0/2 |
|
| African spurred tortoise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
|
| Argentine tortoise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
|
| Impressed tortoise | 1 | 1/0/0 |
Fig. 1Geographical origin and number of faecal samples according to postcode districts in Germany
Number and percentage of positive tortoises regarding infection with gastrointestinal endoparasites (total n = 1005; 459 positive and 546 negative)
| Parasite species | No. of positive (%) | Host species ( |
|---|---|---|
| Oxyurid nematode ( | 434 (43.2) | |
| Ascarid nematode ( | 12 (0.01) | |
| 7 (0.007) | ||
| 7 (0.007) | ||
| 4 (0.004) | ||
| Strongyloid nematode ( | 3 (0.003) | unknown species ( |
| 5 (0.005) | ||
| Heterakid nematodes | 1 (0.001) | |
| 1 (0.001) | ||
| 2 (0.002) | ||
| Facultative pathogen flagellates ( | 2 (0.002) |
Number and percentage of positive tortoise corpses regarding to infestation with potentially health-compromising endoparasites (total n = 49 / 38 positive and 7 different gastrointestinal parasites detected)
| Parasite species | No. of positive (%) | Host species ( |
|---|---|---|
| Oxyurid nematode ( | 28 (57.14) | |
| 3 (6.12) | ||
| 2 (4.08) | ||
| 2 (4.08) | ||
| 2 (4.08) | ||
| Heterakid nematodes | 2 (4.08) | |
| Strongyloid nematode ( | 1 (2.04) | unknown species (1) |
| 1 (2.04) |
Fig. 2Seasonal distribution of parasite-positive and -negative faecal samples and age distribution of examined tortoises during the study period. a Each bar represents the number of nematode eggs found in parasite-positive faecal smears of tortoises during the years 2015 and 2016. b Each bar represents the number of negative and oxyurid-positive tortoise samples analysed during the years 2015 and 2016. c Each bar illustrates number of clinical findings in analysed tortoises according to their ages [juvenile (< 5 years) and adults]. MBD appeared more frequently in juvenile tortoises, while nephrosis or nephritis also affected the cholecalciferol production (vitamin D3) in the kidney
Statistical analysis of specific risk factors for oxyuridosis from data obtained by pet owners
| Factor | Sample size | No. of negative (%) | No. of oxyurid-positive (%) | Chi-squarea | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sender | 991 | 16.28 | < 0.001b | ||
| Private | 798 | 426 (53.4) | 372 (46.6) | ||
| Veterinary doctor | 193 | 134 (69.4) | 59 (30.6) | ||
| Tortoise species | 452 | 2.97 | 0.086 | ||
| | 402 | 222 (55.2) | 180 (44.8) | ||
| | 50 | 34 (68.0) | 16 (32.0) | ||
| Tortoise sex | 725 | 1.43 | 0.231 | ||
| Male | 253 | 150 (59.3) | 103 (40.7) | ||
| Female | 472 | 258 (66.7) | 214 (45.3) | ||
| Tortoise age | 644 | 11.73 | < 0.001b | ||
| Juvenile; < 5a | 294 | 141 (48.0) | 153 (52.0) | ||
| Adult; > 5a | 350 | 215 (61.4) | 135 (38.6) | ||
| Group size | 765 | 0.99 | 0.321 | ||
| Group facility | 648 | 350 (54.0) | 298 (46.0) | ||
| Single enclosure | 117 | 69 (60.5) | 48 (41.0) | ||
| Keeping conditions | 111 | 0.32 | 0.571 | ||
| Free- range | 94 | 62 (66.0) / | 32 (34.0) | ||
| Terrarium | 11 | 10 (58.8) | 7 (41.2) | ||
| Sampling season | 10.968 | < 0.001b | |||
| October-March | 318 | 205 (64.5) | 113 (35.5) | ||
| April-September | 688 | 367 (53.3) | 321 (46.7) |
aChi-square test, df = 1, α = 0.001; critical χ2 value = 10.82)
bSignificant difference
Fig. 3Light microscopy photomicrographs of parasite life-cyste stages found in faecal samples of German pet tortoises. a Oxyurid egg from a Marginated tortoise (Testudo marginata). b Iodide-stained Entamoeba trophozoite from a Hermann tortoise (Testudo hermanni). c Ellipsoidal-shaped Balantidium sp. trophozoite with a long cytostome and oral cavity, from a Hermann tortoise (T. hermanni). d Blastocystis sp. cyst from a Hermann tortoise (T. hermanni). e Nyctotherus sp. cyst in the faeces of an Indian Star tortoise (Geochelone elegans). f Angusticaecum sp. egg from a Hermann tortoise containing infectious L1 (T. hermanni)
Fig. 4a Massive Angusticaecum sp. infection in a Hermann tortoise (Testudo hermanni) (leading to spontaneous expulsion of an adult nematode (arrow). b Lethal oxyurid infection in a necropsied juvenile tortoise (T. hermanni) with a massive colonic oxyurid infection (indicated by an arrow) associated with fatty liver degeneration (i.e. egg-yolk yellow liver). c Balantidium-associated enteritis (HE staining): free Balatidium sp. trophozites detected in the gastrointestinal lumen neighboring an eosinophilic-infiltrated (indicated by arrow) mucosa (T. hermanni, 400×). d Subchronic hexamitiosis (HE staining): interstitial nephritis with lymphocytic infiltration caused by Hexamita sp. Flagellated Hexamita trophozoites can be detected in the renal tubule lumen (indicated by arrow) of a Spider tortoise (Pyxis arachnoides,1000×). e Three trichomonad trophozoites with undulating membrane extending almost to their entire body length (Giemsa staining, 1000×). f Impression preparation of a kidney containing Hexamita sp. trophozoites with characteristic anterior protruded nuclei (arrow, Giemsa staining, 1000×)