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Parasitism by Amblyomma rotundatum on Teiidae lizards in the eastern part of the state of Acre, Brazil.

Simone Delgado TojalIvaneide Nunes da CostaAndré de Abreu Rangel AguirreThiago Fernandes MartinsMarcelo Bahia LabrunaDionatas Ulises de Oliveira MeneguettiPaulo Sérgio BernardeKaroline Silva da CruzJônatas Machado LimaSergio Luiz Prolo JúniorLuís Marcelo de Aranha Camargo
Published in: Revista brasileira de parasitologia veterinaria = Brazilian journal of veterinary parasitology : Orgao Oficial do Colegio Brasileiro de Parasitologia Veterinaria (2023)
The aim of the present study was to report on the occurrence of parasitism by Amblyomma rotundatum ticks on two species of Teiidae lizards and test the presence of rickettsiae in the collected ticks, in the western Brazilian Amazon region. Ticks were collected in July 2019, from a fragment of terra firme forest in the municipality of Senador Guiomard, Acre, Brazil. Two lizards that were infested by immature stages of ticks were caught using mist net and Tomahawk traps. Ectoparasites were collected manually, and the lizard specimens were identified and released at the same location where they had been caught. Three nymphs and 49 larvae were collected from Ameiva ameiva, while 25 nymphs and nine larvae were collected from Tupinambis cuzcoensis, which are both in the family Teiidae. The ticks were identified morphologically as belonging to the genus Amblyomma. Nymphs were identified at species level through molecular analysis, resulting in the tick species Amblyomma rotundatum. This is the first record of parasitism by the tick A. rotundatum on T. cuzcoensis lizard, and the first report of an association between A. rotundatum and the lizard species A. ameiva and T. cuzcoensis in Acre, in the western part of the Amazon region.
Keyphrases
  • south africa
  • genetic diversity
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • drosophila melanogaster
  • aedes aegypti