Descriptive epidemiology of intestinal helminth parasites from stray cat populations in Qatar
Abstract
A total of 488 stray cats, 212 adult and 29 juvenile females plus 235 adult and
12 juvenile males, were examined post-mortem during the winter and summer
months of 2006 from five sites in the vicinity of Doha and its outskirts. Five
helminths, comprising three nematode and two cestode species were identified
and the majority of cats harboured two of these species. The most prevalent was
the cestode Taenia taeniaeformis (75.8%), followed by the cestode Diplopylidium sp.
(42.8%), and the nematodes Ancylostoma tubaeforme (17.0%), Physaloptera sp.
(6.6%) and Toxocara cati (0.8%). All five species were found to be typically
overdispersed in their distribution. Using univariate and multivariate analyses,
the prevalence and abundance of infections were primarily influenced by host
gender and season, with females tending to harbour higher levels of infection
during the summer. No significant differences were found relative to site except
in the case of Physaloptera sp. Using bivariate Pearson product moment
correlations, significant positive co-occurrences were identified between
Diplopylidium sp. and T. taeniaeformis and also between A. tubaeforme and T.
taeniaeformis. The results are discussed in relation to the effect of environmental
conditions on the intestinal helminth infracommunities and their possible
interactions in stray cat populations from such a harsh and arid region as Qatar.
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