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  4. Babesia spp. identified by PCR in ticks collected from domestic and wild ruminants in southern Switzerland

Babesia spp. identified by PCR in ticks collected from domestic and wild ruminants in southern Switzerland

Author(s)
Hilpertshauser, Heidi
Deplazes, Peter
Schnyder, Manuela
Gern, Lise  
Poste de physiologie comportementale  
Mathis, Alexander
Date issued
2006
In
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Vol
10
No
72
From page
6503
To page
6507
Subjects
RANGIFER-TARANDUS-TARANDUS DEER CERVUS-ELAPHUS MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION CERVIDS CATTLE HERD
Abstract
Concurrent infections with vector-borne pathogens affected a cattle herd in Switzerland, and one of the pathogens was identified as Babesia bigemina, which had never been observed in this country before. Therefore, a survey of the occurrence of ruminant Babesia spp. and their tick vectors in Switzerland was conducted. A total of 2,017 ticks were collected from sheep, goats, cattle, and wild ruminants (deer, roe deer, and chamois) in southern parts of Switzerland and identified morphologically. The vast majority of the ticks (99.2%) were Ixodes ricinus, but 14 ticks from sheep and goats were identified as Dermacentor marginatus and two ticks from wild ruminants were identified as Hemaphysalis punctata. PCR analyses of 700 ticks revealed the presence of Babesia divergens (n = 6), Babesia sp. genotype EU1 (n = 14), and B. major (n = 2), whose suggested occurrence was confirmed in this study by molecular analysis, and the presence of novel Babesia sp. genotype CH1 (n = 4), which is closely related to B. odocoilei and to Babesia sp. genotype RD61 reported from North America. The identification of B. divergens and B. major in ticks collected from wild ruminants cast doubt on the postulated strict host specificity of these bovine Babesia species. Furthermore, the zoonotic Babesia sp. genotype EU1 was detected in ticks collected from domestic animals but was obtained predominantly from ticks collected from wild ruminants. More than one tick containing DNA of different Babesia spp. were collected from two red deer. Hence, the role of these game animals as reservoir hosts of Babesia spp. seems to be important but requires further investigation.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/50997
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/11762
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