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Revista Colombiana de Ciencias Pecuarias

Print version ISSN 0120-0690On-line version ISSN 2256-2958

Abstract

LOPEZ, Laura P; ROMERO, Johanna  and  VELASQUEZ, Luz E. Paramphistomidae isolation from dairy cows and its intermediate host (Lymnaea truncatula and Lymnaea columella) in a dairy farm in western Colombian high tropical region. Rev Colom Cienc Pecua [online]. 2008, vol.21, n.1, pp.9-18. ISSN 0120-0690.

Some Paramphistomidae (Region Trematoda: Digenea) parasitize the digestive system of economically important ruminants worldwide. Two species of these flukes have been recorded in cattle from the Caribbean Coast and eastern plains of Colombia. The objective of this study was to determine the frequency of paramphistomids in both dairy cattle (n = 71) and snails on a dairy farm in Rionegro (Antioquia), located in the western Andes. Four quarterly fecal samples were taken in the farm from July 2004 to July 2005. Faeces were collected from lactating dairy cows for diagnosis by using the Dennis technique. Snails were captured in diverse aquatic ecosystems of the locality and their infection status was confirmed by dissection under stereoscopic exam. The eggs and intra-mollusc stages of the parasite were described and photographed. The frequency of the paramphistomid was 100% in the 71 cows evaluated, of which 51 (80%) also presented fasciolid flukes. Eggs of the two digeneid species were differentiated based on their coloration, and the identity of the family confirmed through eclosion of the miracidia. In all 1146 snails were collected and identified as Lymnaea truncatula and a further 335 as L. columella, whose rates of infection to the paramphistomid were 25, 47 and 1.79% respectively. The morphologies of the intra-mollusc stages obtained were compatible with members of the families Paramphistomidae and Fasciolidae. This constitutes the first record of a focus of bovine paramphistomosis in the high Andean zone of western Colombia. The presence in sympatry of the paramphistomid with Fasciola hepatica is noteworthy, as is the finding of two host snail species for both digeneids. The frequencies of infection in the snails indicate that L. truncatula acts as the principal intermediate host of the paramphistomid and L. columella as its alternate intermediate host. Although the frequency of paramphistomids in the herd was very high, presence of the parasite was unsuspected until the present study. This explains the absence of measures for its control.

Keywords : Bos taurus; Paramphistomidae; Fasciola hepatica; Lymnaea columella; Lymnaea truncatula.

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