“…The recent description of the new species T. patagoniensis isolated from the puma in the Argentine Patagonia (Krivokapich et al, 2012) makes it necessary to find out which wild animals are infected by each of these two Trichinella species as well as which are the areas of influence of the two parasites. Marsupials are found in many different environments, from forests to domestic and peridomestic habitats like orchards, henhouses and poultry farms (Cabrera & Yepes, 1960;Hunsaker II, 1977;Contreras, 1983;Gómez Villa-HELMINTHOLOGIA, 51, 3: 198 -202, 2014 First report of Trichinella spiralis from the white-eared (Didelphis albiventris) and the thick-tailed opossum (Lutreolina crassicaudata) in central Argentina (Potkay, 1977;Schweigmann et al, 1999;Gomes et al, 2003;Bodini Santiago et al, 2007;Pérez Carusi et al, 2009), some marsupials are considered a link between wild and domestic habitats for the transmission of zoonotic diseases (Gómez Villafañe et al, 2004;Pérez Carusi et al, 2009). In environments related to the human population, opossums of the genus Didelphis are associated with garbage produced by humans, indicating the close relation between these animals and humans (Pérez Carusi et al, 2009).…”