The First Record of Intestinal Ciliates from the Mountain Zebra (Equus zebra) in South Africa

Author:

Kornilova Olga1,Tsushko Klara2,Chistyakova Ludmila3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia, St. Petersburg, Russia

2. Core Facility Centre “Culture Collection of Microorganisms” St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia

3. Laboratory of Parasitic Worms and Protistology, Zoological Institute RAS, St. Petersburg, Russia

Abstract

This paper is a first report on species of endosymbiotic ciliates (Litostomatea, Trichostomatia) inhabiting the intestine of zebras in South Africa. Ciliates from Mountain Zebra were investigated for the first time in the world. The wild population of mountain zebras in general and the Cape Mountain Zebra subspecies in particular is low in numbers: this species is included as vulnerable in the IUCN Red List. Approximately 15 species of trichostome ciliates from 9 different genera were found in the samples collected from wild zebras in Western Cape, South Africa. Some of the ciliate species are also common to horses and other equids, while others are unique for zebras. The ciliates of Triplumaria genus common to elephants and rhinoceroses, and the species Blepharosphaera ceratotherii previously described in rhinoceroses were found in equids for the first time.

Publisher

Uniwersytet Jagiellonski - Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

Reference17 articles.

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2. Gassovsky G. N. (1919) On the microfauna of the intestine of the horse. Travaux de la Seciété des Naturalistes de Pétrograd 49: 20–37, 65–69

3. Gürelli G., Ito A. (2014) Intestinal ciliated protozoa of the Asian elephant Elephas maximus Linnaeus, 1758 with the description of Triplumaria izmirae n. sp. Eur. J. Protistol. 50: 25–32

4. Hoare C. A. (1937) A new cycloposthiid ciliate (Triplumaria hamertoni gen. n., sp. n.) parasitic in the Indian rhinoceros. Parasitology 29: 559–569

5. Hsiung T. S. (1930) A monograph on the protozoan fauna of the large intestine of the horse. Iowa State College Journal of Science 4: 359–423

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