The occurrence of Fascioloides magna (Bassi, 1875) in the wild cervid population in the Lower Silesian Wilderness – epidemiological and pathological aspects

Author:

Filip-Hutsch Katarzyna1,Pyziel-Serafin Anna M.1,Hutsch Tomasz2,Bulak Kamila3,Czopowicz Michał4,Merta Dorota5,Kobielski Janusz6,Demiaszkiewicz Aleksander W.7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food Hygiene and Public Health Protection, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw University of Life Sciences , 02-776 Warsaw , Poland

2. ALAB bioscience Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory , 05-090 Rybie , Poland

3. Department of Pathomorphology and Forensic Veterinary Medicine, University of Life Sciences in Lublin , 20-612 Lublin , Poland

4. Division of Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw University of Life Sciences , 02-776 Warsaw , Poland

5. Pedagogical University of Krakow , 31-054 Kraków , Poland

6. Ruszów Forest Inspectorate , 59-950 Ruszów , Poland

7. Witold Stefański Institute of Parasitology Polish Academy of Sciences , 00-818 Warsaw , Poland

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Fascioloides magna is a parasite of high veterinary importance due to its pathogenicity for wild and domestic ruminants. The aim of our study was to describe the presence of trematode infection in the red deer population in the Lower Silesian Wilderness, one of the established fascioloidosis foci in Central Europe, and to assess the overall prevalence of F. magna in the studied area. In order to achieve this, a coprological study of different cervid species was performed. Material and Methods The livers of 99 red deer were collected over three years and examined for the presence of trematodes. Prevalence and infection intensity was estimated and a histopathological analysis was performed. In addition, 172 faecal samples from red deer, fallow deer and roe deer were examined. Results By year, Fascioloides magna was isolated from the livers of 2/30 (6.7%), 9/34 (26.5%) and 10/35 (28.6%) red deer. Severe hepatic lesions, including massive tissue damage, extensive fibrosis, and cirrhotic changes in the liver parenchyma were observed. Faecal examination revealed the presence of F. magna eggs, with a prevalence of approximately 40%, 50% and 53% in roe deer, fallow deer and red deer, respectively. Conclusion The eggs of F. magna may be commonly excreted in the faeces of roe deer, as well as those of red deer and fallow deer. The presence of F. magna throughout the cervid population in the Lower Silesian Wilderness favours the risk of the trematode’s transmission to livestock or farmed deer.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference34 articles.

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3. Bassi R.: Sulla cachessia ittero-verminosa, o marciaia, causata dal Distomum magnum (On helmintic cachexia and jaundice caused by Distomum magnum – in Italian). Med Vet Torino 1875, 44, 497–515.

4. Borys B., Bogdaszewska Z., Bogdaszewski M.: A rapid increase in fallow deer and red deer farming in Poland (in Polish). Wiad Zootech 2012, 50, 33–44.

5. Demiaszkiewicz A.W., Kowalczyk R., Filip K.J., Pyziel A.M.: Fascioloides magna: a parasite of roe deer in Bory Zielonogórskie (in Polish). Med Weter 2018, 74, 257–260, doi: 10.21521/mw.6037.

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