2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-018-6181-3
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Helminth infections of wild European gray wolves (Canis lupus Linnaeus, 1758) in Lower Saxony, Germany, and comparison to captive wolves

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…The detection of E. granulosus s.s. as the main taeniid species and the detection of T. hydatigena in only a few samples in this wolf pack, in this specific, highly anthropic area, are particularly interesting compared to the high taeniid biodiversity detected in wolf populations living in wild mountain areas of the Apennines [22,23,49], as well as in other European countries [4,25,43] (Table 3). Also in wild, mountainous areas of the Alps, higher taeniid biodiversity was recorded compared to that detected in this study [37].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The detection of E. granulosus s.s. as the main taeniid species and the detection of T. hydatigena in only a few samples in this wolf pack, in this specific, highly anthropic area, are particularly interesting compared to the high taeniid biodiversity detected in wolf populations living in wild mountain areas of the Apennines [22,23,49], as well as in other European countries [4,25,43] (Table 3). Also in wild, mountainous areas of the Alps, higher taeniid biodiversity was recorded compared to that detected in this study [37].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The verification of a genetic similarity between metacestodes from Polish moose and adult thin-necked bladderworms from wolves across the German border allows the assumption of a possible correlation with the recolonization of wolves in Central Europe as possible final hosts of Taenia hydatigena (Filip et al 2019). Accordingly, eggs of the latter parasite were present in 13% of fecal samples investigated in the framework of a survey on the endoparasite fauna of wild European grey wolves from Germany (Bindke et al 2019). Moreover, the detection of Cysticercus tenuicollis cysts seems to be a common incidental finding in wild boar from Europe (Filip et al 2019;Sgroi et al 2019 and2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…However, the proportion of highly susceptible cubs (=puppies), is much higher in the fox population (around 30 % of the total population in spring as compared with around 5–15 % puppies <6 month of age in the dog population in industrialized societies). Toxocara canis prevalence in wild carnivores other than foxes appears to be generally lower, with study findings ranging between 19 % ( Bridger et al, 2009 ) and 24 % ( Redman et al, 2016 ) in coyotes, between 0.2 and 2% in wolves in Canada ( Wapenaar et al, 2013 ) and up to 13 % in Europe ( Bindke et al, 2019 ; Bryan et al, 2012 ; Szafrańska et al, 2010 ), and up to 14 % in golden jackals in Asia ( Siyadatpanah et al, 2019 ). Thus, overlapping wildlife and domestic parasite transmission, the combination of diverse refugia and other factors mentioned above may explain why AR evolution in T. canis has essentially not been observed.…”
Section: What Is Different In Dogs and Cats Concerning Occurrence Treatment And Control Of Intestinal Parasites Compared With Ruminants Amentioning
confidence: 98%