Author:
Beveridge I.,Chilton N. B.,Johnson P. M.,Smales L. R.,Speare R.,Spratt D. M.
Abstract
The occurrence of gastrointestinal helminth parasites in 40
Macropus agilis, 12 M.
antilopinus, 39 M. dorsalis, 28
M. giganteus, 29 M. parryi, 30
M. robustus and 26
Wallabia bicolor from north and central Queensland was
examined. A total of 124 morphologically defined species of helminth was
encountered, comprising 103 species of strongyloid nematodes, 6 species of
trichostrongyloid nematodes, 2 species of spiruroid nematodes, 4 species of
oxyuroid nematodes, 7 species of anoplocephalid cestodes and 2 species of
digenetic trematodes. Helminth communities in each macropodid host species
exhibited a high level of diversity, and were dominated numerically by
strongyloid nematodes. A high proportion of the helminth species was
restricted to a single host species and there was a low level of similarity
between helminth communities in different host species. Similarities that did
occur were not apparently related to the phylogenetic relationships between
hosts and are best explained by host switching between hosts sharing
overlapping habitats and feeding preferences. There was poor separation of the
helminth species into ‘core’, ‘secondary’ and
‘satellite’ members of communities.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
47 articles.
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