Author:
Beveridge I,Speare R,Johnson PM,Spratt DM
Abstract
Helminth parasites were examined from 4 Hypsiprymnodon moschatus, 18 Aepyprymnus rufescens,
13 Thylogale stigmatica, 13 Onychogalea unguifera, 2 0. fraenata, 8 Lagorchestes conspicillatus and
7 Dendrolagus lumholtzi from north and central Queensland. In all, 63 species of nematodes, ten species
of cestodes and a single species of trematode were encountered. Helminth communities in H. moschatus
and A. rufescens were characterised by few, highly specific parasites; D. lumholtzi similarly harboured
few parasites; those of Onychogalea spp. and L. conspicillatus were more diverse and included a number
of taxa shared with other macropodine hosts. The helminth community of T. stigmatica was extremely
diverse and was dominated by helminths specific to Thylogale spp. The helminth communities of the
various host genera showed little similarity to one another, even in the case of host species that were
broadly sympatric. This lack of similarity is probably due to a mixture of factors, some related to host
phylogeny and others ecological, particularly habitat type and feeding behaviour. The data presented
illustrate a wider range of types of helminth communities in macropodoids than reported to date, and
little evidence of exchange of parasites with rock-wallabies, Petrogale spp., examined from the same
regions of Queensland.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
29 articles.
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