Author(s):
Marigo, Juliana ; Ruoppolo, Valéria ; Weber Rosas, Fernando Cesar ; Valente, Ana Luísa Schifino ; Oliveira, M. R. ; Dias, Ricardo Augusto ; Catão-Dias, José Luiz
Date: 2020
Origin: Oasisbr
Subject(s): Acanthocephala (worms); Animalsia; Anisakis; Anisakis Sp.; Braunina Cordiformis; Cetacea; Delphinidae; Halocercus; Sotalia Fluviatilis; Sotalia Guianensis; Synthesium Tursionis; Trematoda; Vermes; Acanthocephala; Animals; Anisakis; Brasil; Dolphin; Female; Helminthiasis, Animals; Isolation And Purification; Male; Nematode; Parasitology; Trematode; Acanthocephala; Animal; Anisakis; Brasil; Dolphins; Female; Helminthiasis, Animals; Male; Nematoda; Trematoda
Description
From May 1997 to October 2000, 49 Sotalia guianensis (tucuxi dolphin) incidentally caught in fishing nets or stranded in São Paulo (SP) and Paraná (PR) states in Brazil were necropsied. In total, 17 lungs, 35 stomachs, and 30 intestines were analyzed. Contents were washed through a sieve (mesh, 1.50 mm) and examined under a stereoscopic microscope for parasites. Histopathologic analyses were performed in the lungs of five infected dolphins. The nematode Halocercus brasilienste was found in 88% of all lungs examined, inducing moderate-to-severe pneumonia. Braunina cordiformis, Anisakis sp., and acanthocephalans were found in the stomachs. The trematode Synthesium tursionis was the only parasite found in the intestines, and it was identified in 73% of the animals necropsied. No macroscopic lesions were seen due to parasites in the stomachs and intestines analyzed. © Wildlife Disease Association 2010.