CEMAVE
URI permanente desta comunidadehttps://bdc.icmbio.gov.br/handle/cecav/1399
Centro Nacional de Pesquisa e Conservação de Aves Silvestres
Navegar
- Immature stages of ticks in terrrestrial birds of two protected áreas localized in islands of Southestern Brazilian Atlantic Forest(2018) Lugarini, Camile; Ferreira, Ariane; Martins, Thiago Fernandes; Labruna, Marcelo B.Several tick species, especially immature stages of the genera Argas, Ornithodoros, Ixodes, Amblyomma and Haemaphysalis are found parasitizing birds in South America. The present study aimed to add information of tick infestations in terrestrial birds from two proteceted areas localed in islands of southeastern Brazilian Atlantic forest: Carijós Ecological Station and Arvoredo Biological Reserve, Santa Catarina. Birds were captured with mist nets from Sept 2015 to Apr 2018. The skin and the feathers of each bird were inspected for the presence of ticks. The visualized ticks were removed manually or with forceps, stored in 70% ethanol. Nymphal ticks were identified to species while unengorged larvae were identified to genus level due to absence of a specific key. Tick prevalence (infested birds/examined birds × 100) and infestation intensity (ticks/infested birds within each bird species) were calculated. A total of 615 individual birds from 48 species, 20 families and 8 orders were examined (86.2% of sampled individuals belonged to Passeriformes order); 22 (3.6%) were infested by 60 immature forms of ticks (5 nymphs and 55 larvae). The infestation intensity (mean 2.6 ± 2.7) variated from 1.0 to 6.5 ticks/host (highest for Elaenia obscura). Two tick identified species were: Amblyomma longirostre (4 nymphs) in E. obscura (n=2) and Dysithamnus mentalis (n=1); and A. nodosum (1 nymph) in Tachyphonus coronatus (n=1), while all larvae were identified as Amblyomma sp. (in Chiroxiphia caudata, E. obscura, Attila rufus, Troglodytes musculus, Geothlypis aequinoctialis, T. coronatus and Coereba flaveola). Moreover, 1 nymph of A. longirostre was found crawing on the clothes of a field worker. The prevalence of the tick infestation registered here was lower than previously reported in other parts of the Atlantic forest, explained by the complex spatial and temporal ectoparasite dynamics within their hosts. All larvae and nymphs collected in the present study belonged to the genus Amblyomma, which is the most common tick genus in the Neotropical region and Brazil (32 species registered in Brazil), especially in Passerine birds. A. longirostre is widely distributed and most prevalent in Atlantic forest. Adult stage feeds primarily on porcupines while immature forms are commonly infesting birds, mainly in the Passerines. For Elaenia, it was reported in E. flavogaster, E. parvirostris, E. mesoleuca, E. cristata; we extend that list to E. obscura. A. nodosum was previously demonstrated as the second mostly frequent tick infesting birds in the Atlantic forest. The adults of this species are commonly found on the anteaters while immature forms feed primarily on birds, mainly in the order Passeriformes. It was previously reported in T. phoenicius, T. rufus and T. cristatus. This tick species was previously detected in higher prevalence on birds in smaller forest fragments of Atlantic forest, the Carijós Ecological Station case. Birds play important role as carriers of Ricketssia infected ticks and can distribute them within and between continents. Turdus amaurochalinus is a migratory bird that was insfested by Amblyomma. A. longirostre and A. nodosum were reported to be infected by Rickettsia amblyommatis and R.parkeri-like, respectively, which are implicated to produce Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Then, it is important to inventory the different rickettsial genoty pes circulating in this regions, which will be the next step of this study.
Item Migration and season explain tick prevalence in brazilian birds(Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 2021) Fecchio, A.; Lugarine, Camile; Ferreira, A.; Weckstein, J. D.; Kuabara, K. M. D.; Torre, G. M. de la; Ogrzewalska, M.; Martins, T. F.; Dutra, D. de AngeliNeotropical birds are mostly parasitized by immature ticks and act as reservoir hosts of tick-borne pathogens of medical and veterinary interest. Hence, determining the factors that enable ticks to encounter these highly mobile hosts and increase the potential for tick dispersal throughout migratory flyways are important for understanding tick-borne disease transmission. We used 9682 individual birds from 572 species surveyed across Brazil and Bayesian models to disentangle possible avian host traits and climatic drivers of infestation probabilities, accounting for avian host phylogenetic relationships and spatiotemporal factors that may influence tick prevalence. Our models revealed that the probability of an individual bird being infested with tick larvae and nymphs was lower in partial migrant hosts and during the wet season. Notably, infestation probability increased in areas with a higher proportion of partial migrant birds. Other avian ecological traits known to influence tick prevalence (foraging habitat and body mass) and environmental condition that might constrain tick abundance (annual precipitation and minimum temperature) did not explain infestation probability. Our findings suggest that migratory flyways harbouring a greater abundance of migrant bird hosts also harbour a higher prevalence of immature ticks with potential to enhance the local transmission of tick-borne pathogens and spread across regions.