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      Intestinal helminths of golden jackals and red foxes from Tunisia.

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          Abstract

          Forty wild canids including 31 golden jackals (Canis aureus Linné, 1758) and 9 red foxes (Vulpes vulpes Linné, 1758) collected between 2008 and 2011 in the northeast, northwest and center of Tunisia were necropsied and examined for intestinal helminth parasites. All jackals and foxes were found infected with a prevalence rate of 95% for cestodes, 82.5% for nematodes and 7.5% for acanthocephalans. A total of twelve helminth species were recorded in red foxes: cestodes, Dipylidium caninum (55.6%), Diplopylidium noelleri (55.6%), Mesocestoïdes lineatus (55.6%), Mesocestoïdes litteratus (33%), Mesocestoïdes corti (22%); nematodes, Ancylostoma caninum (11%), Uncinaria stenocephala (44%), Spirura rytipleurites (11%), Trichuris vulpis (33%), Pterygodermatites affinis (67%), Oxynema linstowi (33%) and the acanthocephalan Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus (22%). The fifteen recovered helminth species in jackals were Echinococcus granulosus (9.7%), D. caninum (16%), D. noelleri (16%), M. lineatus (74%), M. litteratus (23%), M. corti (12.9%), Taenia pisiformis (3.2%), Taenia spp. (19%), Toxocara canis (16%), Toxascaris leonina (6.5%), A. caninum (9.7%), U. stenocephala (68%), P. affinis (6.5%), O. linstowi (3.2%) and Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus (3.2%). This is the first report on the presence of P. affinis, D. noelleri and O. linstowi in Tunisia. E. granulosus was found in young jackals, aged less than 4 years old, with a higher abundance in females (8.9 worms). M. lineatus presented the highest mean intensity of 231.86 and 108.8 tapeworms respectively in jackals and foxes. Canids from the northwest region had the highest prevalence (77.5%) and highest intensity (243.7) of helminth species compared to those from the northeast and central areas. U. stenocephala and O. linstowi had the highest mean intensity for nematodes in both jackals and foxes at 14.3 and 88 worms respectively.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Vet. Parasitol.
          Veterinary parasitology
          Elsevier BV
          1873-2550
          0304-4017
          Aug 29 2014
          : 204
          : 3-4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Parasitology Laboratory, National School of Veterinary Medicine, 2020 Sidi Thabet, Tunisia. Electronic address: drlsamia@yahoo.fr.
          [2 ] Ecosystems and Environment Research Centre, School of Environment and Life Sciences, University of Salford, M5 4WT, UK. Electronic address: B.Boufana@salford.ac.uk.
          [3 ] Parasitology Laboratory, National School of Veterinary Medicine, 2020 Sidi Thabet, Tunisia.
          [4 ] Carnivores and Equids Medical Pathology, National School of Veterinary Medicine, 2020 Sidi Thabet, Tunisia.
          Article
          S0304-4017(14)00333-1
          10.1016/j.vetpar.2014.05.038
          24938826
          9a192f87-e4c7-41a1-8334-b60d3ffdb6cf
          History

          Red fox,Necropsy,Intestinal helminths,Golden jackal,Epidemiology,Tunisia

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