| Literature DB >> 35362741 |
Diane P Barton1, Damian C Lettoof2, Simon Fearn3, Xiaocheng Zhu4, Nidhish Francis5, Shokoofeh Shamsi5.
Abstract
Specimens of Dolichoperoides macalpini (Nicoll, 1914) (Digenea: Dolichoperoididae) were collected from Australian venomous snakes (Elapidae): Notechis scutatus Peters, 1861 and Austrelaps superbus (Günther, 1858) from Tasmania and surrounding islands and N. s. occidentalis Glauert, 1948 from wetlands near Perth, Western Australia. Despite variation in morphological measurements, genetic analysis showed that the one species of digeneans infected the snakes from all locations. This study presents the first DNA sequences for D. macalpini (internal transcribed spacer, 18S, 28S), confirming its placement in a family separate from the Reniferidae and Telorchiidae. Analysis of the infection dynamics of infection in Western Australian snakes showed significant differences in levels of infection between wetland locations, season and year of collection. Infection of D. macalpini was reported in the gastrointestinal tract, including the mouth, in freshly euthanised snakes in Western Australia, and in the lung in Tasmanian snakes, consistent with earlier reports. Differences in morphology and site of infection are suggested to be due to a combination of season and maturity of the digenean, with infection potentially occurring early in the season, as the snakes emerge from torpor. The need for research on the seasonal dynamics of infection with this parasite is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; Biodiversity; Dolichoperoididae; Host-parasite dynamics; Reptile
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35362741 PMCID: PMC9098595 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-022-07502-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitol Res ISSN: 0932-0113 Impact factor: 2.383
Information on the snakes examined in this study. Data is presented as mean with range in parentheses except for infection data. F female, Juv juvenile, M male, N number of snakes, NP National Park, P prevalence of infection (%), SVL snout-vent length (mm), TL tail length (mm), WA Western Australia, Wt weight (g)
| Snake species | Location | Sex | No. infected ( | Intensity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bibra Lake, WA | M | 10 | 807.3 (746–847) | 96.7 (68–137) | 258.1 (127–328.8) | 2 (20%) | 3.5 (2–5) | |
| F | 6 | 695.8 (580–837) | 103.5 (61–140) | 199.8 (105–305) | 1 (16.7%) | 2 | ||
| Herdsman Lake, WA | M | 14 | 814.1 (671–933) | 86 (35–118) | 215.3 (125–338.5) | 5 (35.7%) | 45.6 (27–108) | |
| F | 7 | 176.2 (698–790) | 92.7 (68–117) | 176.2 (117–261.8) | 3 (42.9%) | 36.3 (4–109) | ||
| Lake Joondalup, WA | M | 9 | 783.8 (724–847) | 106.9 (58–142) | 237.9 (165–327) | 9 (100%) | 52.3 (14–89) | |
| F | 6 | 684.3 (642–712) | 85.5 (28–111) | 166.4 (110–220) | 6 (100%) | 49.5 (22–84) | ||
| Yanchep NP, WA | M | 6 | 795.2 (670–899) | 105.7 (66–142) | 232.3 (140–369.5) | 6 (100%) | 64 (18–130) | |
| F | 4 | 699.3 (650–766) | 99 (67–114) | 160.6 (114–208.3) | 4 (100%) | 71.8 (26–144) | ||
| Tasmania | M | 6 | 1070.2 (895–1416) | 186.3 (145–220) | 749.4 (375.1–1400) | |||
| F | 15 | 992.8 (415–1375) | 172.7 (80–235) | 760.2 (33–2450) | 1 (6.7%) | 64 | ||
| Tasmania | M | 7 | 763.9 (527–885) | 155.1 (127–190) | 380.3 (88.5–700) | 2 (28.6%) | 1.5 (2–3) | |
| F | 6 | 684.2 (400–845) | 138.8 (80–165) | 225.9 (39.6–371.2) | 1 (16.7%) | 25 | ||
| Juv | 3 | 308.3 (160–435) | 56.3 (37.5–75) | 84.3 (3.5–209) | ||||
| Tasmania | F | 1 | 415 | 102.5 | 83 |
Fig. 1Specimens of Dolichoperoides macalpini in the mouth of a live Notechis scutatus occidentalis collected in Perth, Western Australia (A) and in the lungs of a Notechis scutatus collected from near Lulworth, northern Tasmania (B)
Details of the sequences generated in this study
| Species | Host species | Accession number | Locality | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18S | 28S | ITS | |||
| OK572359–60 | OK572367–68 | OM568836 | Tasmania, Australia | ||
| OK572362–63 | OK572365–66 | OM568838–39 | Tasmania, Australia | ||
| OK572361 | OK572364 | OM568837 | Perth, Western Australia | ||
Measurements of specimens of Dolichoperoides macalpini collected from this studya in comparison to measurements presented in the literature
| Reference | This study | Nicoll ( | Johnston and Angel ( | Crowcroft ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host species | ||||
| Location | Western Australia | Victoria & Tasmania | New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia & Tasmania | Tasmania |
| Body length (mm) | 2.0 (1.6–2.4) | 3.1 (2.6–3.5) | 2.0–4.8 | Up to 4.0 |
| Body width (mm) | 0.61 (0.6–0.7) | 1.25 (1.0–1.6) | 1.3–1.7 | Up to 1.6 |
| Oral sucker diameter | 326.7 (290–380) | 315–465 | 300–450 | 600 × 490 |
| Ventral sucker diameter | 290 (270–320) | 250–450 | 250–450 | 470 |
| Pharynx diameter | 136.7 (120–150) × 123.3 (110–150) | 150 × 135 | 140 | 180 |
| Testes length | 238.3 (200–280) | 230 | 330–400 | 450 |
| Testes width | 130 (110–150) | 135 | 150–180 | 230 |
| Cirrus sac length | 1300 | 1000 | ||
| Cirrus sac width | 200–250 | 300 | ||
| Ovary diameter | 80 | 75 | 140–200 | 250 |
| Egg length | 34.2 (31.25–36.25) | 28–32 | 28–34 | 36 |
| Egg width | 17.5 (16.25–18.75) | 18–19 | 18–19 | 20 |
aSpecimens collected from Tasmanian snakes were not included in the table as poor quality of the specimens prevented measurements of internal structures
Fig. 2Phylogenetic placement of Dolichoperoides macalpini among closely related species from superfamily Plagiorchioidea based on partial 28S (A), 18S rRNA (B) and ITS (C) sequences. Trees were calculated through Bayesian algorithms. Posterior probabilities (Bayesian tree) over 0.90 are shown on the node. Sequences generated in this study are denoted by an asterisk. Families to which genera belong are indicated by colour-coded lines; the colour codes are the same across all three phylogenetic trees. A Auridistomidae, B Brachycoeliidae, C Choanocotylidae, D Dolichoperoididae, G Glypthelminthidae, H Haematoloechidae, M Macroderoididae, O Omphalometridae, P Plagiorchiidae, R Reniferidae, T Telorchiidae
Fig. 3Total infection of Dolichoperoides macalpini in 62 Notechis scutatus occidentalis collected from four sites around Perth, Western Australia; categorised by site (A), year (B) and season (C)