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Heartworms in Halichoerus grypus: first records of Acanthocheilonema spirocauda (Onchocercidae; Filarioidea) in 2 grey seals from the North Sea

Authors :
Kristina Lehnert
Insa Herzog
Joy Ometere Boyi
Stephanie Gross
Peter Wohlsein
Christa Ewers
Ellen Prenger-Berninghoff
Ursula Siebert
Source :
Parasitology, Vol 150, Pp 781-785 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2023.

Abstract

The assumed definitive host of the heartworm Acanthocheilonema spirocauda (Onchocerdidae; Filarioidea) is the harbour seal (Phoca vitulina). This filaroid nematode parasitizing in cardiac ventricles and blood vessel lumina of harbour seals (P. vitulina) has a low prevalence and seldom causes severe health impacts. The seal louse (Echinophthirius horridus) is the assumed intermediate host for transmission of A. spirocauda filariae between seals, comprising a unique parasite assembly conveyed from the terrestrial ancestors of pinnipeds. Although grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) are infected by seal lice, heartworm infection was not verified. Analysing a longterm dataset compiled over decades (1996–2021) of health monitoring seals along the German coasts comprising post mortem investigations and archived parasites, 2 cases of A. spirocauda infected male grey seals were detected. Tentative morphological identification was confirmed with molecular tools by sequencing a section of mtDNA COI and comparing nucleotide data with available heartworm sequence. This is the first record of heartworm individuals collected from the heart of grey seals at necropsy. It remains puzzling why heartworm infection occur much less frequently in grey than in harbour seals, although both species use the same habitat, share mixed haul-outs and consume similar prey species. If transmission occurs directly via seal louse vectors on haul-outs, increasing seal populations in the North- and Baltic Sea could have density dependent effects on prevalence of heartworm and seal louse infections. It remains to be shown how species-specificity of filarial nematodes as well as immune system traits of grey seals influence infection patterns of A. spirocauda.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00311820 and 14698161
Volume :
150
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1d8c3cff8844626a6db5d03877ffca2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182023000501