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Can the same species of Platynosomum (Trematoda: Dicrocoeliidae) infect both mammalian and avian hosts?
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Cambridge University Press
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The importance of platynosomiasis has increased in feline veterinary practice, but aspects related to the specificity of Platynosomum spp. in definitive hosts requires further study. Although morphological traits suggest that the same species, P. illiciens, may infect both birds and mammals, the synonymies previously proposed have not been widely accepted, likely because host specificity is assumed. In addition, the name P. fastosum has frequently been used for parasites recovered from mammals. In the present study, metacercariae (n= 100/animal) of P. illiciens recovered from lizards (Hemidactylus mabouia) in Brazil were fed to Australian parakeets (Melopsittacus undulatus) and mice. Two parasites were recovered from the liver of one M. undulatus specimen during a necropsy that was performed 105 days after infection, and all mice were found to be infected with 37 ± 12 (18–48) parasites. The morphology of the P. illiciens obtained from the parakeet was similar to that of parasites obtained from mice and those described previously from naturally infected birds and mammals. Non-specificity of P. illiciens in hosts is discussed briefly, based on the parasitological and morphological results obtained during the avian experimental platynosomiasis and the epidemiology and geographical distribution of this parasite.
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PINTO, H.A.; MATI, V. L. T.; MELO, A. L. Can the same species of Platynosomum (Trematoda: Dicrocoeliidae) infect both mammalian and avian hosts? Journal of Helminthology, [S.l.], v. 90, n. 3, p. 372-376, May 2016. DOI: 10.1017/S0022149X15000152.
