“…These animals often live in close association with anthropogenic environments and endanger public health by destruction and contamination of food and by spreading various diseases. Within Cryptosporidium, eight species and more than ten genotypes have been found in rodents, including C. parvum, Cryptosporidium muris, Cryptosporidium ubiquitum, Cryptosporidium meleagridis, Cryptosporidium scrofarum, Cryptosporidium wrairi, Cryptosporidium tyzzeri (mouse genotype I) and Cryptosporidium andersoni, as well as rat genotypes (I to IV), mouse genotypes (II, III and the Naruko genotype), a ferret genotype, chipmunk genotype I and a hamster genotype (Kimura et al 2007;Kvác et al 2008;Lv et al 2009a, b;Paparini et al 2012;Ren et al 2012;Backhans et al 2013;Ng-Hublin et al 2013;Silva et al 2013). To date, three Giardia species (Giardia microti, Giardia muris and G. duodenalis) have been isolated from naturally infected rodents (Lebbad et al 2010;Backhans et al 2013), and within G. duodenalis, assemblages A, B, C, E, F and G have been identified (Feng and Xiao, 2011).…”