Author:
HANELT B.,MWANGI I. N.,KINUTHIA J. M.,MAINA G. M.,AGOLA L. E.,MUTUKU M. W.,STEINAUER M. L.,AGWANDA B. R.,KIGO L.,MUNGAI B. N.,LOKER E. S.,MKOJI G. M.
Abstract
SUMMARYRecent schistosomiasis control efforts in sub-Saharan Africa have focused nearly exclusively on treatment of humans with praziquantel. However, the extent to which wild mammals act as reservoirs forSchistosoma mansoniand therefore as sources of renewed transmission following control efforts is poorly understood. With the objective to study the role of small mammals as reservoir hosts, 480 animals belonging to 9 rodent and 1 insectivore species were examined for infection with schistosomes in Kisumu, in the Lake Victoria Basin, Kenya. Animals were collected from 2 sites: near the lakeshore and from Nyabera Marsh draining into the lake. A total of 6·0% of the animals captured, including 5 murid rodent species and 1 species of shrew (Crocidura olivieri) were infected with schistosomes. Four schistosome species were recovered and identified usingcox1 DNA barcoding:S. mansoni,S. bovis,S. rodhainiandS. kisumuensis, the latter of which was recently described from Nyabera Marsh.Schistosoma mansoniandS. rodhainiwere found infecting the same host individual (Lophuromys flavopunctatus), suggesting that this host species could be responsible for the production of hybrid schistosomes found in the area. Although the prevalence ofS. mansoniinfection in these reservoir populations was low (1·5%), given their potentially vast population size, their impact on transmission needs further study. Reservoir hosts could perpetuate snail infections and favour renewed transmission to humans once control programmes have ceased.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
25 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献