Refugia or reservoir? Feral goats and their role in the maintenance and circulation of benzimidazole-resistant gastrointestinal nematodes on shared pastures.
Emily Kate FrancisJan ŠlapetaPublished in: Parasitology (2023)
Gastrointestinal nematodes threaten the productivity of grazing livestock and anthelmintic resistance has emerged globally. It is broadly understood that wild ruminants living in sympatry with livestock act as a positive source of refugia for anthelmintic-susceptible nematodes. However, they might also act as reservoirs of anthelmintic-resistant nematodes, contributing to the spread of anthelmintic resistance at a regional scale. Here, we sampled managed sheep and cattle together with feral goats within the same property in New South Wales, Australia. Internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS-2) nemabiome metabarcoding identified 12 gastrointestinal nematodes ( Cooperia oncophora , Cooperia punctata , Haemonchus contortus , Haemonchus placei , Nematodirus spathiger , Ostertagia ostertagi , Teladorsagia circumcincta , Oesophagostomum radiatum , Oesophagostomum venulosum , Trichostrongylus axei , Trichostrongylus colubriformis and Trichostrongylus rugatus ). Isotype-1 β -tubulin metabarcoding targeting benzimidazole resistance polymorphisms identified 6 of these nematode species ( C. oncophora , C. punctata , H. contortus , H. placei , O. ostertagi and T. circumcincta ), with the remaining 3 genera unable to be identified to the species level ( Nematodirus , Oesophagostomum , Trichostrongylus ). Both ITS-2 and β -tubulin metabarcoding showed the presence of a cryptic species of T. circumcincta , known from domestic goats in France. Of the gastrointestinal nematodes detected via β -tubulin metabarcoding, H. contortus , T. circumcincta , Nematodirus and Trichostrongylus exhibited the presence of at least one resistance genotype. We found that generalist gastrointestinal nematodes in untreated feral goats had a similarly high frequency of the benzimidazole-resistant F200Y polymorphism as those nematodes in sheep and cattle. This suggests cross-transmission and maintenance of the resistant genotype within the wild ruminant population, affirming that wild ruminants should be considered potential reservoirs of anthelmintic resistance.