| Literature DB >> 35215092 |
Carlos Ramón Bautista-Garfias1, Gloria Sarahi Castañeda-Ramírez1,2, Zaira Magdalena Estrada-Reyes3, Filippe Elias de Freitas Soares4, Javier Ventura-Cordero5, Pedro Geraldo González-Pech6, Erick R Morgan5, Jesús Soria-Ruiz7, Guillermo López-Guillén2, Liliana Aguilar-Marcelino1.
Abstract
Climate change is causing detrimental changes in living organisms, including pathogens. This review aimed to determine how climate change has impacted livestock system management, and consequently, what factors influenced the gastrointestinal nematodes epidemiology in small ruminants under tropical conditions. The latter is orientated to find out the possible solutions responding to climate change adverse effects. Climate factors that affect the patterns of transmission of gastrointestinal parasites of domesticated ruminants are reviewed. Climate change has modified the behavior of several animal species, including parasites. For this reason, new control methods are required for controlling parasitic infections in livestock animals. After a pertinent literature analysis, conclusions and perspectives of control are given.Entities:
Keywords: Haemonchus; global warming; goat; selection of parasite resistance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215092 PMCID: PMC8875231 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11020148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1On the left side are shown a Haemonchus contortus male and female copulating, then a Rhipicephalus sp. tick and a sheep feeding her lamb. On the right side, the immune cells of a sheep are shown: MAC/DC: macrophage/dendritic cell, T:T cell; CT: cytotoxic T cell; B:B cell; NK: natural killer cell; and plasma cell (Figure elaborated by CR Bautista-Garfias).