Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/116866
Título: Sarcocystis sp. infection (Apicomplexa: Sarcocystidae) in invasive California kingsnake Lampropeltis californiae (Serpentes: Colubridae) in Gran Canaria
Autores/as: Santana Hernández, Kevin Manuel 
Javorská, Kristýna
Rodríguez Ponce, Eligia 
Fecková, Barbora
Šlapeta, Jan
Modrý, David
Clasificación UNESCO: 240112 Parasitología animal
Palabras clave: Canary Islands
Invasive Species
Lampropeltis
Sarcocystis
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Publicación seriada: Parasitology 
Resumen: Invasive species pose a threat not only to biodiversity because they displace or compete with native fauna, but also because of the pathogens they can host. The Canary Islands are an Atlantic biodiversity hotspot threatened by increasing numbers of invasive species, including the California kingsnake Lampropeltis californiae, which was recently introduced to Gran Canaria. Seventy-seven snakes were examined for gastrointestinal parasites in 2019-2020. Sporocysts of Sarcocystis sp. were detected in 10 of them; detection of gamogonia stages in histological sections of 3 snakes confirmed the snake as a definitive host. Partial ssrDNA was amplified using SarcoFext/SarcoRext primers; an additional sequence of Sarcocystis was obtained from the tail muscle of the endemic Gran Canaria giant lizard Gallotia stehlini for a comparison. Identical ssrDNA sequences of unknown Sarcocystis sp. were obtained from five different snakes. Phylogenetic analysis showed that Sarcocystis sp. isolated from invasive California kingsnakes is unrelated to Sarcocystis provisionally considered S. stehlini from the endemic lizard. The dixenous coccidia are rarely reported to invade new predator-prey systems. However, the present data suggest that previously unknown Sarcocystis sp. is circulating among invasive snakes and as yet unknown vertebrate intermediate hosts, with undetermined consequences for the Gran Canaria ecosystem.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/116866
ISSN: 0031-1820
DOI: 10.1017/S0031182022000841
Fuente: Parasitology [ISSN 0031-1820], (Enero 2022)
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